U.S., Russia Agree to De-Escalate Ukraine Tensions
PARIS (AFP) - Washington and Moscow’s top diplomats agreed at high-stakes talks on Friday to keep working to ease tensions over Ukraine, with the United States promising a written response to Russian security demands next week.
Blinken said after the talks that Washington will share written ideas with Russia next week, voicing hope for more diplomacy.
“We didn’t expect any major breakthroughs to happen today, but I believe we are now on a clear path in terms of understanding each other’s concerns and each other’s positions,” Blinken told reporters.
“We anticipate that we will be able to share with Russia our concerns and ideas in more detail in writing next week and we agreed to further discussions after that,” he added.
“We ended up with an agreement that we will receive written responses to all our proposals next week,” Lavrov said in a separate press conference.
“Antony Blinken agreed that we need to have a reasonable dialogue, and I hope emotions will decrease,” Lavrov said.
“I cannot say whether or not we are on the right track. We will know when we get an answer,” Lavrov said.
He added that another meeting could be held between the two, but that it was “premature” to start talking about a summit between Presidents Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin.
Russia on Friday reiterated demands for the “withdrawal of foreign forces, hardware and arms” from countries that were not NATO members before 1997, this time singling out Bulgaria and Romania, two former Warsaw Pact countries that joined NATO in 2004.
Blinken headed to Geneva after a solidarity trip to Kyiv and talks with Britain, France and Germany in Berlin.