Russia has
key interests in common with the United States and needs to work with it
on a common agenda, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday
in a television interview.
In his comments to the state-run Rossiya channel, Putin
appeared to soften his anti-American rhetoric after being highly
critical. Relations between Moscow and Washington and other Western
powers have soured over the conflict in Russia's neighbor Ukraine,
sinking to an all-time low.
"We have disagreements on several issues on the
international agenda. But at the same time there is something that
unites us, that forces us to work together," Putin said.
"I mean general efforts directed at making the world
economy more democratic, measured and balanced, so that the world order
is more democratic. We have a common agenda."
Putin has in the past fiercely attacked the United States
and the West in general, blaming them for the Ukraine crisis, which
Russia says was the result of a Western-backed "coup" against Ukraine's
former leader Viktor Yanukovich.
Russia has repeatedly denied accusations from Kiev and the
West that it is supporting pro-Russian rebels with troops and weapons
in eastern Ukraine, where more than 6,000 people have been killed since
last April.
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