The U.S. and Russia are set to hold their first high-level talks since
sealing a deal to secure and destroy Syria's chemical weapons and the
onset of an apparent warming between Iran and the West.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov planned to meet Monday to discuss both issues on the sidelines of
an economic summit in Indonesia. They will be comparing notes on
progress made since they negotiated the Syria agreement last month.
International disarmament inspectors began work Sunday to destroy
Syria's estimated 1,000-ton stockpile of chemical weapons. They're
working against a Nov. 1 deadline set by the U.N. last month to destroy
the Assad government's capability to produce the weapons.
Kerry and Lavrov will also be talking about Iran and its nuclear
program. Officials from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security
Council — the U.S., China, the Russian Federation, France and the United
Kingdom — and Germany will meet with representatives from Iran in
Geneva on Oct. 15 in renewed talks on Iran's nuclear program.
Tehran insists its nuclear program is peaceful and that it is enriching
uranium to levels needed for medical isotopes and reactor fuel.
Western powers, including the U.S., fear Iran is trying to build a
nuclear bomb and have imposed crippling economic sanctions to encourage
Iran to curb its enrichment program.
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