“The main reason for him [to go] is the poor state of the relationship between our two countries. And a critical level of this relationship that demands a summit between our two countries because this is the only way … to prevent further degradation of our dialogue,” Peskov told CNN.
Next week’s high-stakes summit in Geneva comes as relations between both nations hit recent new lows in the first few months of the Biden administration.
This is why the summit will be “a very good opportunity” to air both countries’ concerns, Peskov said Friday.
He also accused the US of freezing dialogue between the two countries over the past five to seven years “in all the fields, including the vital fields for both our people and even for humankind, like [the] fight with terror [attacks], with climate change, economic cooperation, cooperation in vaccines, in the pandemic … they refuse to cooperate with us in combating digital crime, and so on and so forth.”
“We heard about such a possibility from our American counterparts, but we are still waiting for final confirmation, but since the very beginning President Putin has been open to any alternatives,” Peskov said.
Peskov added that Putin was ready to participate in a joint press conference or hold one of his own in Geneva.
However, Peskov told CNN that Putin was not planning to engage with Biden on the subject of Navalny — to whom Putin never refers by name.
Asked if Putin planned not to back down on the issue if it is broached at Wednesday’s summit, the Kremlin spokesman said: “Well, there is nothing to discuss about it. There is nothing to discuss about this gentleman. He’s in prison, and he is not a subject for the agenda of our bilateral relations.”
A Moscow court on Wednesday ruled that two organizations linked to Navalny are “extremist” groups — forcing them to shut down and rendering their members ineligible to run in upcoming elections. Both groups deny the charge of extremism.
“We don’t think of US-Russia summits in terms of deliverables,” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters this week. “We are thinking of it as an opportunity to communicate what our intentions and capabilities are.”
The conversation next Wednesday will likely be fraught for both leaders, with the agenda expected to include cyber-attacks, human rights violations, and Russia’s actions in Ukraine, according to US officials.
Despite deteriorating relations between the two countries on issues like Ukraine and election interference, Biden hopes to establish a clear channel of communication that would avoid undue surprises.
Their meeting will mark an end to Biden’s first trip abroad as US President, beginning with the Group of Seven summit at a seaside resort in Cornwall, UK. After the G7 wraps Sunday, Biden heads to Brussels for the NATO summit followed by his meeting with Putin.
You may also like
-
Afghanistan: Civilian casualties hit record high amid US withdrawal, UN says
-
How Taiwan is trying to defend against a cyber ‘World War III’
-
Pandemic travel news this week: Quarantine escapes and airplane disguises
-
Why would anyone trust Brexit Britain again?
-
Black fungus: A second crisis is killing survivors of India’s worst Covid wave