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Putin in firing line over Ukraine, Syria at Berlin talks

Host Chela Merkel said the talks -- the first four-way summit for a year -- were aimed at "offering a brutally honest assessment" of progress on implementing the frayed Minsk peace accords for Ukraine. Putin is under enormous pressure.

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 President Vladimir Putin faces a grilling over Russia's role in Ukraine and Syria at talks in Berlin today, on his first visit to the German capital since the Ukrainian conflict erupted.

Host Chela Merkel said the talks -- the first four-way summit for a year -- were aimed at "offering a brutally honest assessment" of progress on implementing the frayed Minsk peace accords for Ukraine. "Things are stalled in many areas such as the ceasefire, political issues and humanitarian issues," she told reporters yesterday. "We have to seize every chance we have for progress. I have to say that we cannot expect a miracle but it is worth every effort at this point."

But Moscow poured cold water on hopes for headway toward a lasting resolution of the conflict. "We do not expect any breakthroughs," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters ahead of Putin's trip. "I don't expect easy talks," admitted German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who will also attend the meeting that is due to start after 6:00 pm (1600 GMT). "A peaceful solution is not yet in sight... but we will not stop trying."
Putin has not visited Berlin since Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in 2014, sending relations with the West plunging to their lowest point since the Cold War.

Moscow's involvement in the Syrian civil war, which has deepened the diplomatic freeze, will also figure at the top of the agenda, Merkel said. Speaking of the "disastrous" situation in the besieged city of Aleppo, Merkel said she and French President Francois Hollande would talk to Putin "about somehow alleviating people's suffering". "Here too, we cannot expect miracles but it is essential to talk, even if the views are far apart," she said.
In a small conciliatory gesture, Russia said it was extending an eight-hour truce in Aleppo, which is planned for Thursday, to 11 hours to allow civilians and rebels to leave the city's battered east.

The move came after Hollande said he would work with Merkel to persuade Putin to prolong the ceasefire. Syria's second city, held by rebels determined to oust President Bashar al-Assad, has come under heavy bombardment since the Russian-backed military announced an offensive in late September to regain control of the east.

Air strikes there have flattened numerous residential buildings and civilian facilities, in a campaign the European Union said could amount to war crimes. The Berlin meeting takes place on the eve of an EU summit in Brussels on relations with Russia, including sanctions over Ukraine, which come up for renewal at the end of the year.
 

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