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Joe Biden, then the US vice-president, shakes hands with Vladimir Putin, then Russia’s prime minister, in Moscow in 2011.
Joe Biden, then the US vice-president, shakes hands with Vladimir Putin, then Russia’s prime minister, in Moscow in 2011. Photograph: Maxim Shipenkov/EPA
Joe Biden, then the US vice-president, shakes hands with Vladimir Putin, then Russia’s prime minister, in Moscow in 2011. Photograph: Maxim Shipenkov/EPA

Joe Biden to meet Vladimir Putin in Geneva on 16 June

This article is more than 2 years old
  • Summit is first since US imposed new sanctions in April
  • US aims to ‘restore predictability and stability’ to Russia ties

Joe Biden will meet Vladimir Putin next month in Geneva, the White House confirmed on Tuesday.

The White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said in a statement: “President Biden will meet with President Putin in Geneva on 16 June. The leaders will discuss the full range of pressing issues, as we seek to restore predictability and stability to the US-Russia relationship.”

The summit will take place shortly after Biden travels to the UK for the G7 summit in Cornwall. It will be his first in-person meeting with Putin since taking office.

Biden proposed a summit in a call with Putin in April, as his administration prepared to levy sanctions against Russian officials for the second time in three months.

White House officials said earlier this week that they were ironing out details for the summit. The national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, discussed the meeting when he met his Russian counterpart, Nikolay Patrushev.

The Kremlin said the presidents would discuss “the current state and prospects of the Russian-US relations, strategic stability issues and the acute problems on the international agenda, including interaction in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic and settlement of regional conflicts”.

The White House has said it is seeking a “stable and predictable” relationship with Russia. It has also called out Putin on allegations that Russia interfered in last year’s US election and that the Kremlin was behind a hacking campaign known as the SolarWinds breach in which Russian hackers infected widely used software with malicious code, gaining access to at least nine US agencies.

The Biden administration has also criticized Russia for the arrest and jailing of the opposition leader Alexei Navalny and publicly acknowledged that it has low to moderate confidence that Russian agents offered bounties to the Taliban to attack US troops in Afghanistan.

The Biden administration announced sanctions in March against several Russian officials and more than a dozen businesses and other entities, over a near-fatal nerve-agent attack on Navalny in August 2020. Navalny returned to Russia days before Biden’s 20 January inauguration and was quickly arrested.

Last month, the US announced it was expelling 10 Russian diplomats and sanctioning companies and individuals in response to SolarWinds and election interference.

Biden acknowledged that he held back on tougher action in order to send a message to Putin that he still held hope that the US and Russia could come to an understanding over the rules of their adversarial relationship.

During his campaign for the White House, Biden described Russia as the “biggest threat” to US security and alliances, and disparaged his predecessor, Donald Trump, for his cozy relationship with Putin.

Trump often sought to downplay the Russian leader’s actions. Their sole summit, in July 2018 in Helsinki, was marked by Trump’s refusal to side with US intelligence over Putin’s denials of Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Weeks into his presidency, Biden told state department employees he would be taking a radically different approach.

“I made it clear to President Putin, in a manner very different from my predecessor, that the days of the United States rolling over in the face of Russia’s aggressive actions interfering with our election, cyber-attacks, poisoning its citizens are over,” he said. “We will not hesitate to raise the cost on Russia and defend our vital interests and our people.”

In March, Biden responded affirmatively when asked by an interviewer if he thought Putin was “a killer”. A Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that showed Biden “definitely does not want to improve relations”, which were “very bad”.

Geneva last hosted American and Russian leaders in 1985, when Ronald Reagan met Mikhail Gorbachev. The Trump administration largely shunned institutions based there, like the World Trade Organization and the World Health Organization. Biden has re-engaged with both.

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