Arab News

Britain’s Johnson to visit Russia for talks

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LONDON: British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson is to travel to Russia in the coming weeks for high-level political talks, his office said Saturday.

It will be the first time a British minister has been to Moscow for an official visit in more than five years and could signal a potential thaw in AngloRussi­an relations after years of antagonism.

A Foreign Office spokeswoma­n stressed that the visit was not a return to “business as usual,” saying Britain’s approach to Russia was “engage, but beware.”

Relations with Russia soured after Britain sought to prosecute suspects in the killing of Kremlin critic and former spy Alexander Litvinenko, murdered by radiation poisoning in London in 2006.

Britain has also been a fervent supporter of Western sanctions against Moscow over Russia’s role in the Ukraine crisis.

Johnson was invited by his Russian counterpar­t Sergei Lavrov, and more detailed timings will be announced later.

“Our policy toward Russia is to ‘engage but beware’ and the visit is entirely consistent with this approach,” the spokeswoma­n said.

“Discussion­s will focus on the UK- Russia relationsh­ip and current internatio­nal issues including Syria and Ukraine, where we continue to have significan­t difference­s.

“This is not a return to business as usual and the foreign secretary will continue to be robust on those issues where we differ.”

The spokeswoma­n said a visit had been in the pipeline since British Prime Minister Theresa May met Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, September 2016.

Johnson and Lavrov held their first telephone talks in August the same year.

Johnson has described Putin as a “ruthless and manipulati­ve tyrant,” and compared his looks to the Harry Potter character Dobby the House Elf. Yet he has called for greater cooperatio­n with the Russian leader in the battle against Daesh in Syria. China in

Johnson has recently hinted at a shift in Syria policy, saying President Bashar Assad could be allowed to run for reelection and mentioning a possible “arrangemen­t” with regime ally Russia.

Britain has been one of the harshest critics of Russia’s Syria policy and the Assad regime, saying the president’s departure is a preconditi­on for any resolution to the conflict.

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