Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart George W. Bush discussed an upcoming NATO-Russia summit in a telephone conversation Friday, according to the White House and the Kremlin.
It was the first publicly disclosed conversation the two leaders had since Putin protegee Dmitry Medvedev became Russia's president-elect in a landslide election on March 2 -- and both sides were stingy with details.
"The heads of state examined questions on the international agenda, particularly in light of preparations for the Russia-NATO Council meeting," a Kremlin statement said.
The White House did not mention the exchange until questioned, and national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe would only say that "they had a good conversation ahead of the NATO summit."
Putin is planning to attend the meeting in Bucharest on April 2-4, which will take place on the sidelines of a full NATO members summit. Bush will attend the alliance gathering.
Tensions are high between Moscow and its Western partners over NATO's expansion drive, US plans to install anti-missile defences in central Europe and Russia's suspension of a key Cold War-era arms pact.