Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart Donald Trump will meet in Alaska on August 15, Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov told reporters.
"The US side has just announced that an agreement has been reached to organize a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump on August 15, Friday, in Alaska. Russia and the US are close neighbors, bordering each other. It seems quite logical that our delegation should simply fly across the Bering Strait, and that such an important and long-awaited summit between the leaders of the two countries should be held there," the Kremlin aide said.
These statements about the upcoming meeting came after US special presidential envoy Steve Witkoff visited Moscow on August 6 and met with Putin. The conversation lasted about three hours.
Russia-US summit likely to address Arctic cooperation, expert says
President Vladimir Putin of Russia and President Donald Trump of the United States are likely to touch upon Arctic cooperation at their upcoming meeting, Troy Bouffard, director of the Center for Arctic Security and Resilience at University of Alaska Fairbanks said.
"I think that a discussion of the Arctic will occur," he pointed out. "I think the most important factor of the Arctic region, for Russia and the United States especially, is to agree on conditions that will support and facilitate stability for the region. Russia prioritizes stability for the region - above all - as the other Arctic nations do, largely because this is the key to their top goal of supporting and developing use of the Northern Sea Route," the expert elaborated.
"As far as the purpose of the meeting, my instincts tell me that perhaps the circumstances and timing are right to negotiate an end to the Russia-Ukraine war," Bouffard added.
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