Archive for March 2, 2013

Syria, Iran condemn US plan to aid anti-Assad rebels

March 2, 2013

Syria, Iran condemn US plan to aid anti-Assad rebels | JPost | Israel News.

By REUTERS
03/02/2013 15:49
Syrian FM meets Iranian counterpart Salehi in Tehran, accuses US of double standard, supporting “groups that kill Syrian people.”

Syria Foreign Minister Walid Moallem

Syria Foreign Minister Walid Moallem Photo: AP Photo/David Karp

BEIRUT – Syria and Iran on Saturday condemned a move by the United States to give non-lethal aid to rebels fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad, accusing Washington of double standards.

“I do not understand how the United States can give support to groups that kill the Syrian people,” Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moualem said at a news conference in Tehran with Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran’s foreign minister.

“This is nothing but a double-standard policy … One who seeks a political solution does not punish the Syrian people.”

The United States said on Thursday it would for the first time give non-lethal aid to Syrian rebels, describing the aid as a way to bolster the rebels’ popular support.

The assistance will include medical supplies, food for rebel fighters and $60 million to help the civil opposition provide basic services like security, education and sanitation.

Iran’s Salehi said the US move would prolong the Syrian conflict, an uprising-turned-civil war in which 70,000 people have been killed.

“If you really feel sorry about the ongoing situation in Syria you should force the opposition to sit at the negotiation table with the Syrian government and put an end to bloodshed,” he said.

“Why do you encourage the opposition to continue these acts of violence?”

Iran and Russia support Assad, while the United States and its allies generally back the opposition.

Iraqi forces attack FSA positions inside Syria

March 2, 2013

Iraqi forces attack FSA positions inside Syria.

 

Large reinforcements were reportedly being deployed by Iraq near the Syrian borders.  (AFP)

Large reinforcements were reportedly being deployed by Iraq near the Syrian borders. (AFP)

 

For the first time, Iraqi forces opened fire on Syria shelling the positions of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) days after Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned that a victory of the Syrian opposition would spread chaos in the region.

Al Arabiya correspondent near the Syrian-Iraqi border reported that Iraqi snipers took up positions on buildings near the Rebiya crossing while others forces shelled the positions of the Free Syrian Army.

The correspondent said that large reinforcements were being deployed by the Maliki government in Baghdad near the Syrian borders.

On Wednesday, Maliki warned if victory by Syrian rebels will spark sectarian wars in his own country and in Lebanon and will create a new haven for al-Qaeda that would destabilize the region.

“Neither the opposition nor the regime can finish each other off,” he said. “If the opposition is victorious, there will be a civil war in Lebanon, divisions in Jordan and a sectarian war in Iraq,” Maliki said in an interview with the Associated Pres

Obama, Putin discuss Syria, Iran

March 2, 2013

Obama, Putin discuss Syria, Iran – Israel News, Ynetnews.

US, Russian president speak, discuss Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, Assad’s regime; leaders agree to hold meetings

Associated Press

Published: 03.02.13, 08:35 / Israel News

US President Barack Obama has phoned Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday, welcoming Russian cooperation on international efforts to confront Iran‘s nuclear ambitions.

The White House says the two men also discussed the ongoing violence in Syria, a topic that still divides Washington and Moscow.

The White House said Putin and Obama agreed to hold their own meeting in June on the sidelines of the upcoming G-8 meeting in Northern Ireland. Obama also told Putin he looked forward to visiting St. Petersburg for the G-20 meeting in September.
פוטין ואובמה במפגש בקדנציה הקודמת. יתראו שוב ביוני (צילום: AP)

Obama, Putin (Photo: AP)

The White House added that Putin and Obama welcome “substantive and constructive consultations” by Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov over a political transition in Syria.

The US and Russian leaders’ conversation followed a meeting of US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, who met for the first time Tuesday, spending more than an hour discussing the civil war in Syria and other joint matters.

Kerry calls Turkey on anti-Semitic rhetoric – Los Angeles City Buzz | Examiner.com

March 2, 2013

Kerry calls Turkey on anti-Semitic rhetoric – Los Angeles City Buzz | Examiner.com.

 

 

Kerry calls Turkey on anti-Semitic rhetoric

 

 

 

 

On his first overseas visit, 69-year-old Secretary of State John Kerry expressed dissatisfaction with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan who recently compared Zionism to Fascism and Islamophobia. Meeting with Kerry to discuss Syria’s growing civil war spilling across the Turkish border, Kerry expressed disapproval over Erdogan’s remarks with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. “Just as with Zionism, anti-Semitism and fascism, it has become necessary to view Islamophobia as a crime against humanity,” Erodogan told delebates Wednesday, Feb. 27 at the U.N. Alliance of Civilization in Vienna. “We not only disagree with it, we found it objectionable,” Kerry told a joint press conference with Davutoglu. Erdogan still harbors resentment against Israel for a shooting incident May 31, 2010 when Israeli commandos returned fire on a Turkish-flagged boat, killing eight civilians.

 

Turkey got involved with a Palestinian flotilla attempting to break Israel’s Gaza blockade and bring humanitarian goods into the seaside Mediterranean port. While Israeli officials apologized for the loss of life on the high seas, Tel Aviv insisted the naval blockade and surveillance was designed to keep weapons and war materiel out of Gaza. When the Israeli Navy attempted to board the Turkish-flagged vessel they took hostile fire, returning fire killing nine Turkish civilians. Turkish officials knew the risks when they participated in a Palestinian-backed flotilla to Gaza. Comparing Zionism and anti-Semitism to fascism, Erdogan didn’t win friends in Washington or Tel Aviv. “Given the many challenges that the neighborhood faces, it is essential that both Turkey and Israel find a way to take steps . . . to rekindle their historic cooperation,” said Kerry, hoping to open some doors.

 

Since the May 31, 2010 incident, Erdogan has been looking for an unequivocal apology and reparations from Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamine Netanyahu has tried extend an olive branch to Ankara but still hasn’t worked out the terms of a reparation deal for families of the nine victims. Faced with growing instability on the Syrian borders, Erdogan knows that cooperation with Israel would go a long way in preserving border security. “If we must talk about hostile acts, then Israel’s attitude and its brutal killing of nine of our civilian citizens in international waters may be called hostile,” said Davutoglu, justifying Erdogan’s remarks. Whatever mistakes were made by Israeli commandos, Turkish officials know that Israel didn’t attack military or civilian targets but responded in kind to hostile fire. Erdogan has unfinished business with Israel and wants Netanyahu to apologize.

 

Turkey needs to dial back the rhetoric and dialogue with Israel over what can be done to normalize relations. “No single statement carries a higher price that the blood of a person . . if Israel want to hears positive statements from Turkey, it needs to reconsider its attitude both towards us and the West Bank,” Davutoglu told the press with Kerry present. Netanyahu has been reluctant to admit fault in the 2010 incident because the pro-Palestinian flotilla knew the risks when they violated the Israeli blockade bringing goods into Gaza. With all-to-familiar rocket attacks from Gaza, Israel knows what types of goods make its way by land tunnels or sea into the former Egyptian Mediterranean port. With demands made from Syrian rebels for arms, Erdogan and Davutoglu know the dangers in the region, including supplying arms to potential al-Qaeda or radical Palestinian Damascus takeover.

 

Turkey has bigger fish to fry that feuding with Israel over an unfortunate accident on the high seas. After giving $385 million in humanitarian aid to Syrian rebels, the Obama administration remains skeptical of supplying direct arms or war materiel to Syrian rebels. “Many sides . . . focus (more) on the length of the rebel fighter’s beard that they do on the blood of children being killed,” said Syrian National Coalition President Moaz Alkhatib, appearing with Kerry and Italian Foreign Minister. Given that Israel already bombed a Syrian convoy Jan. 30, 2013 ferrying anti-aircraft weapons to Lebanon, Turkey knows—whether it admits it or no publicly—Israel can be counted on to help coordinate security concerns along it long Syrian border. Kerry knows that it serves U.S. interests in the region to reconcile bilateral relations between Israel and Turkey.

 

Kerry’s found out in his maiden voyage as Secretary of State that a strong U.S. presence is needed to settle petty disputes in the region. Whatever problems Turkey has with Israel, they have more compelling issues securing the Syrian border and assuring that whoever replaces al-Assad it doesn’t radicalize the region. With over 70,000 Syrians killed since the Arab Spring spread to Syria March 15, 2011, it’s been difficult for the West to jump on the revolution bandwagon. When Mubarak was toppled Feb. 11, 2011 by forces loyal to the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt has been in economic and political chaos. Its $11 billion tourism industry has been devastated by political and social instability. Rankling the Syrian opposition groups, Kerry doesn’t want to commit anything other than humanitarian aid. U.S. and EU officials have had a hard time vetting opposition groups, ranging from al-Qaeda to radical Palestinian groups, leaving the Syrian civil war in chaos.

 

About the Author

John M. Curtis write politically neutral commentary analyzing spin in national and global news. He’s editor of OnlineColumnsist.com and author of Dodging The Bullet and Operation Charisma

Gantz: Rocket fired at Ashkelon Tuesday aimed for power plant | The Times of Israel

March 2, 2013

Gantz: Rocket fired at Ashkelon Tuesday aimed for power plant

Chief of staff says he does not see third intifada unfolding; shots fired from Gaza Friday hit IDF officer’s vehicle

By Times of Israel staff March 1, 2013, 10:57 pm 2

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The Ashkelon power plant in 2009. (photo credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90)

The Ashkelon power plant in 2009. (photo credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90)

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Operation Pillar of Defense

Benny Gantz

Ashkelon

The Grad rocket fired at Israel from Gaza Tuesday was aimed at the Ashkelon power plant, IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz said.

The rocket was fired from the Gaza Strip at Ashkelon early Tuesday morning, breaking months of quiet between Israel and the Palestinian enclave.

The rocket hit a road in an industrial area in the south of the city around 7 a.m.. There were no injuries, although the road was damaged.

The al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade initially claimed responsibility for firing the rocket, saying it was retaliation for Palestinian prisoner Arafat Jaradat’s death in an Israeli prison on Saturday. The terrorist group, associated with Fatah, had published a leaflet on Monday urging a harsh response against Israel for Jaradat’s death. On Thursday, though, Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack — a claim Israeli officials said was more credible.

Israeli bomb technicians inspect the remains of a long-range rocket fired from the northern Gaza Strip at the coastal city of Ashkelon, Tuesday. (photo credit: Tsafrir Abayov/Flash90)

Israeli bomb technicians inspect the remains of a long-range rocket fired from the northern Gaza Strip at the coastal city of Ashkelon, Tuesday. (photo credit: Tsafrir Abayov/Flash90)

The shooting was the first rocket attack in three months, breaking the truce between Israel and Hamas that has held since the conclusion of Operation Pillar of Defense.

Gantz, speaking Thursday with high school students in Rosh Haayin, said that Israel knew who was behind the shooting. He added that the IDF was working tirelessly to prevent further such attacks.

“More information about our deterrence methods exists, but cannot be revealed,” he said.

He said there was a possibility of more clashes with Gaza in the future, but rejected suggestions that Israel was facing a third Intifada.

“I do not think we see such a thing unfolding before our eyes,” he said, referring to the recent upsurge of violence in the West Bank. “But the conflict level may rise, so we are prepared and we are convinced that we will know how to contain such events properly.”

IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, 2012 (photo credit: Uri Lenz/Flash90)

IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, 2012 (photo credit: Uri Lenz/Flash90)

Meanwhile on Friday afternoon, an Israeli military vehicle was damaged when Palestinians in the northern Gaza Strip shot rifle fire toward the border fence for the first time since Pillar of Defense. The damaged vehicle belonged to a high-ranking IDF officer. No one was injured.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said Palestinians also hurled rocks and firebombs over the Gaza border fence and that IDF soldiers shot and wounded three rioters

via Gantz: Rocket fired at Ashkelon Tuesday aimed for power plant | The Times of Israel.

Ahead of March Iran Talks, US Urged to Back Possible Israeli Strike | Common Dreams

March 2, 2013

Ahead of March Iran Talks, US Urged to Back Possible Israeli Strike | Common Dreams.

 

 

Ahead of March Iran Talks, US Urged to Back Possible Israeli Strike

by Jasmin Ramsey

 

WASHINGTON – In the same week that talks between Iran and the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany) concluded in Kazakhstan with rare positive Iranian feedback, a joint resolution declaring U.S. support for Israel in the event of an Israeli military strike on Iran’s nuclear program was brought before Congress.

The resolution introduced by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) says the US, if Israel takes military action against Iran, should “provide diplomatic, military, and economic support to our ally in defense of its territory, people, and existence.” (Photo: via ThinkProgress.org) The resolution, introduced by Senators Lindsey Graham and Robert Menendez and publicized in a press conference Thursday on Capitol Hill, will reportedly be a focus of the widely attended American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) annual conference in Washington next week.

 

According to a copy obtained by IPS, the “sense of the Congress” resolution “Urges that, if Israel is compelled to take military action in self-defense, the United States should stand with Israel and provide diplomatic, military, and economic support to our ally in defense of its territory, people, and existence.”

 

“The resolution reiterates strong support for Israel and concern with Iran’s nuclear research – two sentiments no one would argue,” Heather Hurlburt, director of the National Security Network, told IPS.

 

“Those who vote on it will understand that it is hortatory and doesn’t have any effect on U.S. national security decision-making, but that may not be so clear to observers overseas,” continued Hurlburt, a former staffer in Madeleine Albright’s State Department under President Bill Clinton.

 

“It’s critical that the U.S. be seen to retain decision-making flexibility as negotiations seem to be moving toward a more sensitive phase,” she said.

 

This week in Almaty the P5+1 softened their “stop, shut and ship” offer presented last spring by asking Iran to “suspend” enrichment of uranium to 20 percent while using its existing stockpile for nuclear fuel and modifying equipment at its Fordow facility rather than permanently closing it.

 

This, in addition to increased IAEA monitoring, would result in slight sanctions relief that will not impact existing oil or financial sanctions, a U.S. diplomat told Al-Monitor.

 

Iran’s chief negotiator Saeed Jalili called the talks “a positive step” in a statement published on Mehr News.

 

“Some of the points raised in their respond [sic] were more realistic comparing to what they said in the past…which we believe is positive, despite the fact that we have a long way to reach to the optimum point,” said Jalili.

 

“There are reasons to be cautiously optimistic about outcome of the Almaty talks,” Kelsey Davenport, a nonproliferation analyst at the Arms Control Association, told IPS.

 

“If press accounts are accurate, I think that the revised proposal reflects a move toward a more balanced interim step that addresses the most urgent concerns on both sides; namely sanctions relief for Iran and for the P5+1, it would limit the size of Iran’s stockpile of uranium enriched to 20 percent,” she said.

 

But the non-binding resolution presented Thursday is unlikely to go unnoticed by the Iranians, who will reportedly present a response to the P5+1’s revised offer during another meeting set for Mar. 16 in Istanbul, Turkey.

 

“If the Senate moves forward with this, they risk sending the signal to the Iranians that, no matter what was said at Almaty, the U.S. does not have its own house in order to make a deal and is not serious about resolving the nuclear dispute peacefully,” Jamal Abdi, policy director of the National Iranian American Council, told IPS.

 

“The same senators and organizations sponsoring this resolution would make this exact argument to halt further negotiations were Tehran to take such a provocative step in the midst of talks,” he said.

 

The resolution follows a bipartisan bill presented on Wednesday that seeks to make it the policy of the U.S. to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapons capability — contrasting with President Obama’s previous declarations that the U.S. will not allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon – and to broaden and tighten existing sanctions on Iran.

 

Introduced by Representatives Ed Royce and Eliot Engel, the Nuclear Iran Prevention Act aims to restrict Iran’s access to hard currency by targeting its foreign exchange reserves, impose tougher restrictions on commercial trade with Iran and designate Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC) as a foreign terrorist organization.

 

“It is usually overlooked, but each time the United States imposes a new coercive restriction on Iran, Iran responds by upping the ante on its nuclear program,” Gary Sick, a Columbia University professor who served on the National Security Council staff under Presidents Ford, Carter, and Reagan, told IPS.

 

“A new round of sanctions at this moment, when serious talks seem to be getting underway for the first time in eight months, risks sabotaging the limited progress that has been made,” he said.

 

While there may have been cautious optimism over the results of Almaty, a variety of factors will influence the ongoing diplomatic process.

 

“Nothing can really happen before the Iranian elections, other than ‘marking time,’” Robert E. Hunter, who served on the National Security Council staff throughout the Carter administration, told IPS.

 

“Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu will almost surely press the President to take a strong stand on Iran and to reaffirm his commitment to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons [during Obama’s visit to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan],” said Hunter, who was U.S. ambassador to NATO from 1993-98.

 

“The issue is not just nuclear weapons or the lack thereof. Deep and long-lasting regional competitions for influence are at the heart of the matter…And in the last three administrations, we have been unwilling to put on the table a negotiating position that has a chance to succeed, by recognizing that the security interests of the U.S., Israel, and Iran must all be considered,” Hunter told IPS.

 

“No country can negotiate seriously when it is under military threat, facing sanctions that only help to strengthen the regime domestically, and with no serious proposals on the ‘plus’ side,” he said.

 

“Sanctions may be most useful after a strike against Iran’s nuclear-weapons facilities,” Clifford May, the president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based group that strongly advocates sanctions on Iran, wrote Thursday in an op-ed.

 

“If such an agreement [where “Iran’s rulers verifiably end the nuclear-weapons program, halt terrorism sponsorship, and ease domestic oppression”] cannot be reached, continuing and even tightening sanctions will make it more difficult for Iran to replace facilities destroyed after a military option has been exercised,” said May.

 

To date, no U.S. official assessment has concluded that Iran currently has an active weapons of mass destruction program.

In August 2012, the Obama administration reiterated the assessment made by Director of National Intelligence James Clapper in January 2012 that “Iran is keeping open the option to develop

Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injured – Israel News, Ynetnews

March 2, 2013

Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injured

Published: 03.02.13, 14:12 / Israel News

At least three mortar shells hit open areas in Israeli territories in the southern Golan Heights. No injuries or damage were immediately reported.

IDF troops are scouring the area. According to preliminary evaluations, the hits are most likely the result of Syrian battles’ stray shooting. (Yoav Zitun)

via Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injured – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injured – Israel News, Ynetnews

March 2, 2013

Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injuredPublished: 03.02.13, 14:12 / Israel News At least three mortar shells hit open areas in Israeli territories in the southern Golan Heights. No injuries or damage were immediately reported. IDF troops are scouring the area. According to preliminary evaluations, the hits are most likely the result of Syrian battles’ stray shooting. Yoav Zitun

via Mortar shells hit Golan Heights; none injured – Israel News, Ynetnews.

What are the implications for Israel of Hagel’s confirmation?

March 2, 2013

What are the implications for Israel of Hagel’s confirmation? – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

It’s now more important than ever for Obama to send a message to Tehran that regardless of who heads the Defense Department, U.S. policy is to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

By | Feb.28, 2013 | 8:53 PM 
Barack Obama shakes hands with Chuck Hagel, January 7th 2013

President Barack Obama shakes hands with Defense Secretary-nominee, former Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel, in the White House on January 7, 2013. Photo by AP

U.S. President Barack Obama’s nominee for secretary of defense, former Senator Chuck Hagel, has now been confirmed by a Senate vote of 58-41, with all the Senate Democrats and four Republicans voting in his favor (the two independents also voted for him). But this nose count hides the reality that a majority of senators, including many Democrats, would almost certainly have preferred a different candidate. The vote reflected not overwhelming support for Hagel and the views he expressed before being nominated, but rather an acknowledgment that a president – especially one so recently reelected by so significant a majority – has the right to pick his cabinet members, unless they are unqualified or disqualified.

President Obama’s original decision to propose Hagel was not popular among many of the Democratic senators who eventually voted for him. Nor was it universally supported by White House aides. But the president stuck with Hagel and presented his supporters in the Senate with a difficult choice: Vote the president’s preference for Hagel or vote their own preference for someone other than Hagel. Led by Jewish and other pro-Israel Democratic Senators such as Chuck Schumer, the Senate gave the president his man.

Hagel did not help himself by his performance during the confirmation hearings. He seemed confused and uncertain about the Obama policy toward Iran’s quest for nuclear weapons. Fortunately for Hagel, he had already received the support of Schumer and other Jewish and pro-Israel senators before the hearings, based on what he had told them in private meetings. Had these senators waited to see how he did during the public hearings, the situation might have been different – at least for some. But having committed themselves to support the president’s choice, they had to put the best face on Hagel’s public performance. It wasn’t easy.

Prior to the president’s decision to nominate Hagel, I was one of many who thought his nomination might send a dangerous message to Iran. Here is what I wrote:

“Were Chuck Hagel to be nominated as secretary of defense, the Iranian mullahs would interpret President Obama’s decision as a signal that the military option was now, effectively, off the table. It would encourage them to proceed with their development of nuclear weapons without fear of an attack from the United States. It would tell them that if they can endure the pain of sanctions and continue the charade of negotiations, they will ultimately be allowed to win the prize of a deliverable nuclear bomb.”

Following President Obama’s nomination of Hagel, I wrote the following:

“Senator Hagel will have an opportunity to clarify, and hopefully to change, his previous statements with regard to these issues. He should be asked probing questions about sanctions, about the military option and about Israel’s security. In his answers, he must persuade the Iranian leadership that there is no distance between his current views and those of the president who has nominated him.”

Hagel tried to do that, but with decidedly mixed results. He was pilloried by Republican Senators and defended by Democrats. What should have been a nuanced debate over principles – should Hagel’s changing and confusing views regarding “containment,” “prevention” and “military options” trump the presumption in favor of confirming cabinet nominations? – descended into partisan name calling.

Because the controversy over Hagel’s nomination became so partisan, his confirmation victory cannot be seen as a defeat for Israel or for the pro-Israel lobby in the United States. The major Jewish and pro-Israel organizations took no public position on Hagel’s confirmation – perhaps because they knew they couldn’t stop it after Senator Schumer and several of his pro-Israel colleagues came out in support. If their goal was to get the secretary-designate to commit to positions different from the ones he had previously taken, then they succeeded. It remains to be seen whether the new secretary of state will act more consistently with what he had said in his past paid speeches or what he just promised the senators in private and in public.

Hagel’s nomination and confirmation now makes it more important than ever for President Obama to send an unambiguous message to the Iranian leadership that regardless of who heads the Defense Department, the president makes policy, and the American policy is clear: to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, even if this requires the use of force. Containment must be kept off the table, the military option must be kept on the table, and the mullahs must have no doubt about this policy.

President Obama’s upcoming visit to Israel will provide him a perfect opportunity to assure the Israeli people and their leaders that he still has their back and that he will never allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons – regardless of what his secretary of defense may believe in his heart.

Obama, Putin discuss Syria, Iran

March 2, 2013

Obama, Putin discuss Syria, Iran – Israel News, Ynetnews.

US, Russian president speak, discuss Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, Assad’s regime; leaders agree to hold meetings

Associated Press

Published: 03.02.13, 08:35 / Israel News

US President Barack Obama has phoned Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday, welcoming Russian cooperation on international efforts to confront Iran‘s nuclear ambitions.

 

The White House says the two men also discussed the ongoing violence in Syria, a topic that still divides Washington and Moscow.

 

The White House said Putin and Obama agreed to hold their own meeting in June on the sidelines of the upcoming G-8 meeting in Northern Ireland. Obama also told Putin he looked forward to visiting St. Petersburg for the G-20 meeting in September.
פוטין ואובמה במפגש בקדנציה הקודמת. יתראו שוב ביוני (צילום: AP)

Obama, Putin (Photo: AP)

 

The White House added that Putin and Obama welcome “substantive and constructive consultations” by Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov over a political transition in Syria.

 

The US and Russian leaders’ conversation followed a meeting of US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, who met for the first time Tuesday, spending more than an hour discussing the civil war in Syria and other joint matters.