The interview is set for June 16.

US President Joe Biden and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will meet in Geneva, Switzerland, the White House announced on Tuesday (May 25). 

This first tête-à-tête between the two men since the arrival of Joe Biden to power will take place in a climate of sharp tensions between Washington and Moscow, against the backdrop of exchanges of sanctions and accusations. 

It will take place in the wake, on the western side, of the meetings of the leaders of the G7 and NATO which will give pride of place to the display of a common anti-Moscow front. 

Urgent matters 

"The leaders will address a range of urgent issues as we seek to make relations between the United States and Russia more stable and predictable," said Jen Psaki, spokesman for the White House, in a brief statement. 

The announcement comes on the same day that the imprisoned Russian opponent Alexeï Navalny said he was targeted by three criminal investigations, pressure has been increasing for several weeks against his movement and his supporters. 

From an American source, it is insisted that a meeting with Vladimir Putin is by no means a reward for the latter, but the most effective way to manage relations between the two countries, which is difficult and should remain so. . 

On the occasion of this meeting, Joe Biden intends in particular to mention the regime of Alexander Lukashenko in Belarus, of which Moscow is the main support. 

The country is increasingly isolated with the entry into force of restrictions against its airspace, in retaliation against Minsk, accused of hijacking a European airliner to arrest an opponent on board. 

Nuclear weapons control on the menu  

The regime of Alexander Lukashenko, in power since 1994, is already targeted by multiple Western sanctions for having harshly suppressed an unprecedented protest movement which saw tens of thousands of people marching in the streets in 2020 following the presidential election of August, considered "rigged" by the Europeans.

Still from an American source, it is specified that the question of nuclear weapons control will feature prominently in the discussions. 

In early February, the United States and Russia extended the New Start disarmament treaty for five years.

Signed in 2010, the agreement limits arsenals to a maximum of 1,550 warheads deployed for each of these two countries, a reduction of nearly 30% compared to the previous ceiling set in 2002. 

The nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea, the Arctic, climate change and even Syria will also be part of the discussions at this summit. 

With AFP

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