Washington - US President Barack Obama was headed to Russia
later Sunday, then on to Italy for the G8 meetings on Wednesday and a
stop in Ghana on Saturday.
In Moscow, Obama is seeking to 'reset' relations by finding
cooperation on a number of challenges, including confronting Iranian
and North Korean nuclear ambitions.
Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev are to discuss
replacement of a nuclear arms-control agreement that expires in
December. Both leaders have expressed hope that they can move
beyond the strained ties of the past.
Senior officials on both sides told the New York Times on Friday
that Russia plans to announce it will grant permission for US troops
and weapons to be flown over its territory on the way to Afghanistan.
Until now, only rail transport carrying non lethal goods has been
allowed.
At Obama's first G8 meeting in L'Aquila, Italy, the agenda
includes the global recession, climate change and the situations in
Iran and the Middle East.
Russia has been the only G8 country to acknowledge Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the clear victor in the disputed
June 12 election.
The G8 summit comes ahead of the larger Group of 20 nations
planning to meet in September in the US city of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, to discuss the economic crisis. Obama has been at odds
with his European counterparts, who want to see more regulation of US
financial markets.
In Ghana, Obama plans outline of his Africa policy in a speech
during his first visit as president to the continent. Obama has in
years past visited Kenya, the homeland of his late father.
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