Talks under high tension between the Russians and the Americans began on Monday in Geneva, amid fears of an invasion of Ukraine by Moscow, which calls for a limitation of Western influence at its borders.
The meeting, which began at 9:55 a.m. KST, is being held between the deputy foreign ministers of the two countries – Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Russian Deputy Minister Sergei Riabkov, a spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs said. ‘US state.
This is the third time that Wendy Sherman and Sergei Riabkov have met in Geneva since the meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his American counterpart Joe Biden in June 2021 on the shores of Lake Geneva.
Wendy Sherman and Sergei Riabkov met for the first time on July 28 at the Permanent Representation of the United States, before meeting once more on September 30 at the Russian Representation. This third meeting launches an intense diplomatic week, in particular to try to defuse the explosive crisis that is playing out around Ukraine. “The discussion was complicated, it might not be simple,” said Sergei Riabkov, quoted by the Interfax agency, following a two-hour working dinner Sunday evening in Geneva with Wendy Sherman.
Avoiding a new “Ukrainian aggression”
Press conferences are scheduled for the end of the followingnoon. The United States and Russia have taken a firm position ahead of these negotiations. Washington has warned of a risk of “confrontation” and Moscow has ruled out any concessions.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Russia to avoid further “Ukrainian aggression” and choose the diplomatic route, while the Kremlin, under pressure to withdraw its troops from the Ukrainian border, calls on the West guarantees on security in Europe, including that NATO will not extend further east.
In addition to the American-Russian discussions in Switzerland on Monday, a NATO-Russia meeting is scheduled for Wednesday in Brussels, then a meeting on Thursday in Vienna of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), to include the Europeans, who fear to be marginalized.