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Pentagon chief: talks with Russian counterpart possible
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 27, 2018

Pentagon chief Jim Mattis said Friday that he was considering a meeting with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, as the leaders of their countries mull possible new talks.

"I am considering meeting with my counterpart but there has been no decision," Mattis told journalists at the Pentagon.

"I'm all for re-opening communications," he added. "It's most important that we talk with those countries we have the largest disagreements with."

In Johannesburg, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he was "ready" to travel to Washington to see Donald Trump, and revealed he had invited the US leader to Moscow, shortly after their July 16 summit in Helsinki.

The White House said Friday that Trump was "open" to visiting the Russian capital, though it said earlier this week that any new meeting between the two leaders would likely not happen until 2019.

Trump's performance at the summit earned howls of criticism at home, where he was seen as being too conciliatory towards Putin.

Mattis said there were "no policy changes" with respect to Russia in the wake of the summit.

On Tuesday, Mattis said there would be no cooperation with the Russian military in Syria -- at least for now.

Russia and the US are conducting separate military campaigns in the war-wracked country. They operate a special hotline to make sure there are no mishaps involving the two sides' ground forces or planes.

"We will not be doing anything additional until the Secretary of State (Mike Pompeo) and the president have further figured out at what point we are going to start working, alongside our allies, with Russia in the future," Mattis said at a press conference in California.

According to the Pentagon, the last ministerial-level contact between US and Russian defense ministers dates back to a telephone call between Shoigu and Mattis's predecessor Ash Carter in September 2015.

The last face-to-face meeting dates back to October 2013 between Shoigu and Chuck Hagel, shortly before Russia annexed Crimea.


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SUPERPOWERS
Russia dismisses US Crimea declaration
Moscow (AFP) July 26, 2018
Russia scoffed at a US declaration that said Washington would not accept Moscow's annexation of Crimea, suggesting the country's Ukraine policy could change in the future. "We know the worth of these 'fateful declarations'," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a sarcastic comment on Facebook late Wednesday. She suggested that Washington's Crimea policy could still change - perhaps even under a new leader in the future. In the declaration, US Secretary of State Mike ... read more

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