Putin Gives Up on Bush, Complicating Iran, North Korea Efforts
By Bill Varner
Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Russia is intent on mending ties with the U.S. once President
George W. Bush leaves the office on Jan. 20, prompting unprecedented interest in this year's presidential campaign, its UN ambassador said in an interview.
In the meantime, Russia is unlikely to back new efforts to curtail the nuclear ambitions of Iran and North Korea.
``There has been a standard in the history of Soviet and now Russian-American relations of common wisdom that there is not much difference between administrations; now that is not the case,'' said Ambassador
Vitaly Churkin, the last spokesman for the Soviet Union's foreign ministry.
``The problem is there'' because of the dispute over Russian actions in Georgia, Churkin added before today's start of speeches by world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly. ``But I don't think there is irreversible damage. We do not want to see our formats of cooperation disrupted.''
--MORE--