The Philippine Star

Moscow open to Putin visit to Washington

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MOSCOW (AP) — Moscow is ready to discuss a possible visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin to Washington after a surprise invitation from US President Donald Trump, Russia’s ambassador to the US said yesterday.

With confusion still swirling around what the two men discussed behind closed doors in Helsinki earlier this week, Ambassador Anatoly Antonov said it’s important to “deal with the results” of their first summit before jumping too fast into a new one.

He said he hadn’t seen Trump’s invitation himself, but that “Russia was always open to such proposals. We are ready for discussion­s on this subject.”

The Kremlin has the final say, but hasn’t responded yet to the proposal Trump made on Thursday.

Antonov gave a few more details of what Trump and Putin talked about in Helsinki, but insisted that diplomatic discussion­s should remain discreet in order to be effective.

He notably acknowledg­ed that the two men discussed a possible referendum in eastern Ukraine.

“This issue was discussed,” he said, adding without elaboratin­g that Putin made “concrete proposals” to Trump on solutions for the Ukraine conflict.

Trump tweeted that the two men discussed Ukraine, but has not mentioned a referendum or revealed specifics of the Ukraine discussion­s. The US and Russia have been on opposing sides of the conflict in Ukraine, unleashed after a popular uprising against a pro-Russian president and Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Ukraine and European powers are unlikely to support a referendum in the Donbass region, where pro-Russian separatist­s hold sway.

The Russian ambassador to Washington also denounced “anti-Russian anger” in the US and reiterated denials of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election — interrupti­ng a questioner to say “We didn’t interfere!”

He also reiterated denials of Russian involvemen­t in the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in Britain.

Antonov called Monday’s summit in Helsinki a “key event” in internatio­nal politics and laughed off suggestion­s that the two men made any “secret deals.”

Antonov gave details of their discussion­s on arms control, but said the US has been reluctant to back Russia’s proposals so far. He said the summit notably made progress on US-Russian cooperatio­n on Syria’s future.

Meanwhile, Antonov also pushed for the release of a gun rights activist accused of being a covert agent in the US, calling her arrest a “farce.”

US federal prosecutor­s accused Maria Butina this week of being a covert Russian agent and working to infiltrate US political organizati­ons, including the National Rifle Associatio­n, before and after Trump’s election as president.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses journalist­s during a news conference in Helsinki, Finland on Monday.
REUTERS Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses journalist­s during a news conference in Helsinki, Finland on Monday.

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