This version of the page http://unian.net/eng/news/news-245161.html (0.0.0.0) stored by archive.org.ua. It represents a snapshot of the page as of 2008-09-12. The original page over time could change.
Bush and Putin, at last meeting, agree to disagree : Ukraine News by UNIAN
FRIDAY, 12 september 2008

news agency
óêð | ðóñ |  
  NEWS  |  PHOTO  |  RADIO  |  PRODUCTION  |  SERVICES  |  PRESS-CONFERENCES  |  RELEASES  |  CONTACTS  |   FOR SUBSCRIBERS  |  
    
  Special projects:  Culture   Health   Human rights   Kharkiv region   Crimea   Odessa   Stock market   EU News   Transport   Energy   Insurance   Euro-2012  
   POLL
[07.04.2008 09:08]  By Steven Lee Myers, IHT

Bush and Putin, at last meeting, agree to disagree


President George W. Bush has met with Vladimir Putin of Russia more than any foreign leader other than Tony Blair — 28 times — and has disagreed with few leaders more than he has with Putin.

On Sunday, meeting for the last time as presidents, they again failed to come to agreement on perhaps the most contentious issue between them: American missile defenses in Europe.

Yet they declared that their open and sometimes testy friendship had left a solid foundation for cooperation between their two countries on that and other international security and economic issues.

Bush and Putin — "two old warhorses," as the American president put it at the NATO summit meeting in Romania on Friday — completed a joint statement on Sunday morning that included language describing how they would in the future address the issue of missile defenses that administration officials had suggested was unlikely the day before.

The brief statement was part of an 11-page "strategic framework" that largely restated well-established positions on security and economic matters, although Bush and his aides described the provisions on missile defense as important progress.

"I happen to believe it is a significant breakthrough," Bush said, appearing beside Putin one last time at the presidential retreat here on the Black Sea, "simply because I`ve been very much involved with this issue and know how far it`s come."

Even agreement on three paragraphs dealing with missile defense remained uncertain until dinner on Saturday night, after Bush arrived, underscoring the diplomatic sensitivities of the issue.

At the dinner, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Russia`s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, haggled over whether the statement would say "assuaging" Russia concerns rather than simply "easing" them, scribbling the words out on paper before settling on the former, a senior administration official said on the plane on the way home, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was describing diplomatic negotiations.

While the two officials did that, the two presidents danced with a Russian folk troupe, prompting the leader of the world`s geographically largest nation to declare the president of the world`s most powerful one "a brilliant dancer."

Putin, for his part, welcomed an agreement to hold additional talks on proposed American missile defense radar and missiles in Poland and the Czech Republic, but he added that the "devil is in the details" and flatly restated his opposition to plans the administration considers a part of his global legacy.

"This is not about language; this is not about diplomatic phrasing or wording; this is about the substance of the issue," Putin said. "I would like to be very clear on this. Our fundamental attitude to the American plans has not changed."

With Putin stepping down from office on May 7, handing the office — if not the reins of power — to his protégé, Dmitri Medvedev, Sunday`s meeting had a reflective mood, if not an elegiac one.

Barely a year after the Russian leader compared the Bush administration`s foreign policy to that of the Third Reich, the two leaders clearly strived to avoid any unpleasant public rifts in this meeting, and largely succeeded.

Each praised the other for a respectful personal relationship that has often appeared at odds with the steady deterioration of relations between the United States and Russia since 2001, when Putin offered Russian assistance after the Sept. 11 attacks.

"A lot of times in politics you have people look you in the eye and tell you what`s not on their mind," Bush said here on Sunday. "He looks you in the eye and tells you what`s on his mind. He`s been very truthful, and to men, that`s the only way you can find common ground."

Putin painted a portrait of the American president that is rarely heard or seen in Russia`s state-owned media. "I`ve always appreciated his honesty and openness, his willingness to listen to his partner," Putin said, "and this is precious."

Still, Putin noted areas where the countries remain at odds. In addition to missile defense, he cited negotiations for further reductions in nuclear arsenals; the stalled treaty regulating conventional forces in Europe; and the continued expansion of NATO, which at its summit meeting last week invited two more nations, Croatia and Albania, to join the alliance while leaving open the door for still more, including the former Soviet republics of Ukraine and Georgia.

Bush spent the week in Ukraine, Romania and Croatia extolling the virtues of the alliance`s expansion to include all democratic nations of Europe, but Putin denounced the expansion as the "old logic" that perceived Russia as an adversary.

"As Churchill said, if you can`t change the subject," he said, "it is a sign of radicalism."

In the agreement, Russia did signal that it was willing to consider cooperating with the United States and NATO on regional missile defense and even a global system, something the Russian leader called "the best guarantee of security of all."

Bush dismissed a question about whether Sunday`s agreement simply passed the dispute to his successor, possibly one who would not pursue the missile defense program as aggressively as he has. "You can cynically say it`s kicking the can down the road," he said. "I don`t appreciate that."

Still there was a sense of time passing that even he noted. "It`s a moment where life just moves on," he said.

Bush also met separately with Medvedev, a far younger man elected the third Russian president in March after a vote that few outside of Russia considered fair, though the Bush administration`s criticism was subdued.

Bush, who famously described looking into Putin`s eyes and getting a sense of his soul when they first met in 2001, described his impressions of the new leader in a less mystical way. He called him "a smart fellow."

Putin will not disappear from public life. Medvedev announced that Putin would be the next prime minister, leaving foreign policy, in accordance with the Russian constitution, to the president`s office, Putin emphasized.

Bush said he and the new president would probably meet again at the next meeting of the Group of Eight industrialized countries in Japan in July.

Asked whether relations were better or worse after their roughly parallel terms in office, Putin noted that, at least, a repeat of the Cuban missile crisis was now impossible. "We always want to have more of a good thing," he said, according to a transcript of the official translation, "and we shouldn`t forget that, as we say, the better is the worst enemy of the good."

By Steven Lee Myers

The International Herald Tribune

permanent URL of article:
http://www.unian.net/eng/news/news-245161.html

Comments  |   print version  


   LAST NEWS
17:41   Lavrov shocked British Foreign Secretary by telephone

 "Who are you to f***ing lecture me?"

17:23   Georgia rejects goods of Russia in favor of Ukrainian product

Ukraine will be the leading trading partner of Georgia

15:46   Yatseniuk: Yushchenko, Tymoshenko, and Yanukovych have equal chances

To become President of Ukraine

15:25   Yushchenko expects deputies to overcome the crisis themselves

Says he can not conduct dialog instead of factions` leaders

14:34   President expects stable economy in 2009

He expects the Government to put more efforts

14:19   Medvedev "would attack Georgia even if on NATO track"

Russian President spoke to a group of experts

13:45   Yushchenko calls on government to pay off gas debt to Russia

Says Ukraine treats with understanding the necessity to rise natural gas prices

13:18   Bush failed to halt Georgia war, says Putin

The Russian prime minister spoke to a group of western journalists

12:39   Yushchenko: Tymoshenko and BYuT won't agree to resume coalition

He vowed to do his best to resume the dialog

12:18   Yushchenko rules out strong-arm scenario of solving crisis in Ukraine

"Nobody would bring tanks under the parliament..."

11:43   New de-facto coalition was attempt of coup d'etat - President

He will demand the Government to clarify its positions

11:05   Lost cat returned home after nine years

Dixie, a 15-year-old ginger cat, disappeared in 1999

10:42   And the most overpaid celebrity is...

Forbes publishes its annual list of least bankable stars

10:31   Hrytsenko: Ukraine should recall its application for NATO MAP

It`s better to focus on regional security

10:12   EBRD puts an Estonian in charge of investments in Ukraine

Ukraine is EBRD`s second largest investment destination

09:55   Sea Launch to put U.S. telecom satellite in orbit

On September 23 from the Pacific

09:32   Russia prepares to start Georgia pullout

Moscow vowed to strengthen its military after last month`s war

09:20   Palin says Georgia and Ukraine should be admitted to NATO

The U.S. should be prepared to go to war if Russia invades Georgia again

18:41   Kremlin slaps down South Ossetia

over claim it will join Russia

18:20   SKorea on alert for NKorea shift after Kim's stroke

A military plan is being drawn up for any contingency

18:11   Looting, fires rage in South Ossetia: rights groups

"Every day we saw new fires..."

17:34   List of those willing to run for President widens

Minister does not see any way out of crisis

17:18   Blue Danube? We're getting there, says study

 Thanks to cooperation between the countries through which it flows

16:45   Russia has no 'imperial ambitions' says Putin

He saw no substance in fears of a new Cold War

16:37   SBU summons Medvedchuk to interrogation on September 11

Because of his “anti-state activities”

15:33   Tymoshenko was interrogated in PGO for more 5 hours

The next interrogation scheduled for September 16

14:53   Russia, Ukraine set to expand agricultural output

Considering higher prices for commodities

14:27   Chernovetskiy confident of penetrating into Verkhovna Rada

Kyiv Mayor to take part in regular parliamentary election

13:29   South Ossetia's says his region would become part of Russia

"We`re not intending to set up some independent Ossetia..."

13:04   Our Ukraine is ready to open discussion with BYuT

To preserve coalition of democratic forces

12:49   1.5 thousand Russians illegally received Ukrainian passports in Crimea

Military men of Russian Black Sea Fleet

12:44   Reversal of fortune for emerging markets - FT

Ukraine is among the hardest hit stock markets in dollar terms

11:54   Russia accuses Ukraine of 'unfriendly' policies

Says it could harm bilateral contacts

11:48   Five foreigners on hijacked vessel in Nigeria

Two Britons, two South Africans and a Ukrainian

11:36   Government initiates reforms in sphere of medicines supplies

Tymoshenko vows to introduce order into this "very criminal" sphere

all news »»»

    ANNOUNCEMENTS
all items »»»   
press-announce »»»   tv-announce »»»   radio-announce »»»

   ARCHIVE
September 2008
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30          
«««  •  »»» 

Sarkozy left Ukraine waiting on the threshold

RSS export/JS |  FORUM |  CONTACTS |  UNIAN-monitor  |  FOR SUBSCRIBERS
weblog.com.ua