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US, Russian diplomats seek to ease tensions
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-11-09 20:21

"We have paid attention to the positions that Barack Obama has published on his site. They instill hope that we can examine these questions in a more constructive way," state-run RIA-Novosti quoted Lavrov as saying.

Obama has expressed skepticism about the effectiveness and cost of a multibillion-dollar missile defense program undertaken by the Bush administration to base American missiles in Poland as part of a shield against possible attacks from Iran.

A US missile shield so close to its borders has been a sore point with Russia.

McCormack said that during their meeting Rice and Lavrov "talked about the broad range of issues in the relationship in the context of the Sochi declaration." He was referring to a document signed this year by Bush and then-Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Black Sea resort.

The declaration acknowledges the former Cold War foes will have disagreements on various issues but pledges that the two countries will work together in areas where cooperation is possible and in their interests.

Yet that principle has been challenged in recent months as Russia, under new President Dmitry Medvedev, has accelerated aggressive stances with the invasion of Georgia in August and just this past week with a blistering critique of US missile defense plans for Europe.

"On Georgia, the two reiterated their unchanged positions," McCormack said, indicating Rice had not backed down on harsh US criticism of Russia's military action and Lavrov had held to Moscow's firm defense of the operation.

The two did say that despite intense disagreements over missile defense and a successor to the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty that expires at the end of next year, US and Russian officials would meet soon to discuss new US proposals, he said.

But prospects for breakthroughs on both appear poor, especially after Medvedev on Wednesday blasted the US missile defense plans and threatened to move short-range nuclear missiles to Russia's borders with NATO allies.

McCormack said Rice and Lavrov spent much of their time talking about how to preserve the limited progress made in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks after Washington conceded the negotiations could not meet a year-end deadline to produce a deal.

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