Obama, Putin meet briefly

After keeping his distance, President Barack Obama came together with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday for a 15-minute discussion of Ukraine, face to face for the first time since the crisis erupted earlier this year. Putin’s spokesman said the two exchanged opinions about Ukraine’s battles with pro-Russian insurgents. “Putin and Obama spoke for the need to end violence and fighting as quickly as possible,” Dmitry Peskov said. Earlier, Obama to be dodging Putin as world leaders posed for a group photo. Later, as leaders strolled casually into a nearby building for lunch, Obama ended up directly behind Putin, but averted his gaze.

Associated Press

Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke face-to-face with Ukraine’s incoming president about ending the violence in the former Soviet state, and Kiev’s new leader said talks could begin in earnest as soon as Sunday — a diplomatic breakthrough playing out along the battlefield beaches of Normandy.

Speaking after his meeting with Petro Poroshenko — who is to be sworn in today as Ukraine’s president — Putin called for an immediate cease-fire in eastern Ukraine before any further talks, and said he expected Poroshenko to show “state wisdom” and “good will.” Poroshenko later said talks could begin in earnest on his first full day in office.

“All the questions were difficult,” Poroshenko said before returning to Ukraine, “but we will make every effort to achieve the goals we have set ourselves and begin negotiations on Sunday.”

Putin said he welcomed Poroshenko’s call for an end to the bloodshed and liked his approach to settling the crisis but wanted to wait until the Ukrainian leader could deliver it in detail to the nation.

“If it continues like that, then conditions will be created for developing our relations in other areas, including the economy,” Putin said. He specified that Moscow is ready to lower gas prices for Ukraine if it pays off its debt for previous supplies, easing fears of a gas shutdown to Europe dependent upon gas pipelines that cross Ukraine.

French President Francois Hollande, who orchestrated the meeting along with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, said Putin and Poroshenko also discussed how Russia could recognize the Ukrainian elections as well as measures to de-escalate the fighting.

“It didn’t last a long time but long enough for the message to be passed on,” Hollande told the French network TF1.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin and Poroshenko also “confirmed that there is no alternative to settling the situation by peaceful political means.”

Frozen out of G-7 talks Thursday in Brussels, Putin appeared to be moving incrementally back into the fold of the West following his first direct talks with Poroshenko since the billionaire was elected to lead Ukraine. The previous pro-Kremlin president, Viktor Yanukovych, was ousted in what Putin said was a coup.

Russia, which had recalled its ambassador from Ukraine, said he will return to Kiev to attend Poroshenko’s inauguration. That appeared to be a recognition of Ukraine’s election, Hollande said.

A senior U.S. administration official, who was not authorized to discuss the meeting on the record, said the possibility of arranging a meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian leaders gained traction at the G-7 meeting with the objective for Russia to hear the same message from “all of the allies.”

In recent weeks, Ukrainian officials say more than 200 people have died — a figure that could not be independently confirmed — in fighting between Ukrainian government troops and pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine. The insurgents declared their region independent and have asked to join Russia, but the Kremlin has ignored their appeal.

Putin has denied allegations by Kiev and the West that Russia has fomented the rebellion.