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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Putin arrives in China for summit on security

Associated Press

BEIJING – Russian President Vladimir Putin was in Beijing today for a regional security summit and talks with Chinese leaders expected to focus on Syria, Iran and energy cooperation.

On his first visit to his country’s vast neighbor since resuming the Russian presidency earlier this month, Putin was scheduled to hold discussions with Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao later today and then take part in a signing ceremony for a range of government and business agreements.

On Wednesday and Thursday, Putin and Hu will be among leaders attending the annual summit of the six-member Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a grouping of Russia, China and four Central Asian states seeking to boost regional integration and curb Western influence.

Russia and China have repeatedly defied calls by the international community to confront Syria’s regime over spiraling violence, saying they will not back steps that could lead to foreign intervention. Russia has long been a close ally of President Bashar Assad’s regime, while Beijing opposes setting precedents that could potentially be applied to its troubled western regions of Tibet and Xinjiang.

Both countries also oppose further sanctions against Iran over its suspected drive to develop nuclear weapons.

Ties between the former Cold War rivals have grown steadily warmer over the course of Putin’s decade-long dominance of Russian political life. Along with close coordination in international affairs, they’ve sought to boost economic ties, particularly in the energy sector, setting a target of raising bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2015 from $83.5 billion last year.

Despite that, disputes and mistrust linger. Moscow is unhappy with China’s copying of Russian fighter jets and other military hardware and the sides have wrangled for years about the price of gas to be delivered by two Siberian pipelines.

Putin’s visit follows his attendance Monday at an EU summit in St. Petersburg at which he defended his country’s human rights record, claiming that Russia has no political prisoners and dismissing criticism of a draconian bill that hikes fines for unsanctioned street rallies.