Putin, Trump advisor to discuss 'sad state' of ties, possible summit

AFP  |  Moscow 

Russian will host US today to lay the groundwork for a highly-anticipated summit between the and Donald Trump, a said.

Trump said this month that should be re-admitted to the group of industrialised democracies, from which it was suspended for its annexation of Crimea in 2014.

"The will host Bolton at the Kremlin," Putin's told reporters today.

The meeting will be used to discuss "the sad state" of bilateral relations as well as top international issues, he added.

Bolton's visit is aimed at exploring the prospect of a summit between the US and Russian presidents which may take place next month.

The former US to the UN, Bolton is known for his hawkish stances and has repeatedly called for tough sanctions against

"We negotiate with at our peril," he wrote in a column for in 2017.

Earlier Monday Bolton met behind closed doors with and the first of Russia's security council, Yury Averyanov, Russian media reported.

Trump is due to participate in the July 11-12 NATO summit in before heading to Britain to meet and

Putin and Trump discussed holding a summit when the US leader congratulated the Russian on his re-election in March, reportedly ignoring advice from his

said Trump had invited Putin for a summit at the but a decision was later made to meet on neutral ground.

Earlier this month, Putin said he was ready to meet Trump as soon as gave the green light, adding that was a possible venue.

But US-based website reported this week that the two could meet in the Finnish capital instead.

Finnish President said is "always ready to offer its good services if asked." He did not provide further details.

In a conference call with reporters today, Peskov declined to discuss details of a possible summit.

US-Russian relations have suffered from years of disagreement over the Syrian conflict, Russia's annexation of Crimea and its involvement in

More recently bilateral ties have been strained by a probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 US and suspected collusion with the Trump campaign, as well as by the of a former Russian in Britain.

The last, brief meeting between Putin and Trump took place in November 2017 in during an APEC summit.

Analysts expect the Putin-Trump summit to be more style than substance.

Observers say Putin is unlikely to make any major concessions on the crisis or other sensitive issues, giving little incentive to review its sanctions.

"A Trump-Putin meeting would temporarily ease US-Russia tensions, but new US sanctions are still likely later this year," said the think tank in a note.

"There remain multiple triggers for new sanctions this year, including past cyber operations linked to Russia, continued Russian involvement in Syria, or any evidence of Russian interference in the November US midterm elections.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 27 2018. 18:10 IST