Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that Russia-US relations are currently not at their best in a congratulatory Fourth of July note to Barack Obama. The Russian president said he was sure, however, that the two countries “must cooperate.”
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The Independence Day greetings from Russia come at a time when
relations between the two countries are at their lowest in years,
mostly over differences in approach to the situation in Ukraine.
But the Kremlin press service said that, nevertheless, “the
head of the Russian state has expressed hope that despite
difficulties and disagreements, longstanding relations between
the two countries will successfully develop on a pragmatic and
equal basis,” citing the congratulatory telegram.
Vladimir Putin also described Russia and the US as “two
countries bearing special responsibility for maintaining
international stability and security.” He said that the two
nations “must cooperate not only in the interests of their
own peoples but of the whole world.”
Russia and the US have lately been engaged in trading accusations
over who is responsible for the current bloodshed in southeast
Ukraine.
Washington has imposed sanctions on Russia and has threatened
more to come, as Obama’s administration believes that Moscow is
inspiring the southeastern regions to stage an anti-Kiev
rebellion.
"If Russia's provocations continue, it is clear from our
discussions here that the G7 nations are ready to impose
additional costs on Russia," Obama told ministers at the
G7 summit in Brussels in early June, to which
Putin was not invited.
The Kremlin has long denied the accusations of masterminding the
protests in southeast Ukraine, insisting that the conflict is
purely an internal Ukrainian one. If there’s anyone adding fuel
to the fire, it’s the US, Moscow says.
“Our American colleagues… according to a lot of evidence,
still favor pushing the Ukrainian leadership toward the path of
confrontation,” Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov,
said in an interview in late June.
Measures that could stop the current bloodshed in Ukraine were
agreed upon Wednesday during four-way talks between the foreign ministers of Germany,
France, Russia and Ukraine.
The same day, Ukrainian authorities said that 279 people have
died in the Donetsk Region since the start of fighting this
spring, including 160 civilians. Figures for the Lugansk Region
have not been revealed.
On June 24, the UN estimated that a total of 423 people were
killed between April 15 and June 20 in eastern Ukraine.
The conflict has forced thousands of Ukrainians to flee their
homes. The number of Ukrainian refugees in Russia has reached
110,000 people, the UN’s refugee department said on June 27.