US President Joe Biden said on Tuesday (4 May) he would like to hold his proposed summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin during his June trip to Europe.
US President Joe Biden said that “autocrat” Vladimir Putin was right to say that relations were at their lowest point though he suggested that Russia might be weaker than it seemed and that Moscow had overreached in the Middle East.
President Vladimir Putin on Sunday (9 May) vowed Russia will “firmly” defend national interests and denounced the return of “Russophobia”, as the country marked the 76th anniversary of victory in World War II.
US President Joe Biden and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin will hold their first summit next month in Geneva, both sides said Tuesday (25 May), setting the stage for a new chapter in their fraught relationship.
Polish President Andrzej Duda will travel to Bucharest to meet his Romanian counterpart Klaus Iohannis next Monday for a joint teleconference meeting with leaders of the Bucharest Nine (B-9) group. The head of the National Security Bureau, Paweł Soloch, announced…
After the tumultuous years for the transatlantic relationship under Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s promise that “America is back” as he meets Western allies are a welcome relief. But they’re not enough, diplomats and foreign policy experts say.
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