Bush, Putin meet before G8
Bush, Putin meet before G8
Bush and Putin's their meeting was overshadowed by failure to agree on a major bilateral trade deal sought by Russia.

St Petersburg (Russia): US President George W Bush and Russia's Vladimir Putin met before a G8 summit on Saturday, but their meeting was overshadowed by failure to agree on a major bilateral trade deal sought by Russia.

The Bush-Putin talks, following a more casual barbecue get-together between the two men on Friday night, will set the

tone for the weekend summit at which West Asia's violence and the standoff over Iran's nuclear ambitions will also loom large.

President Putin expressed early hope of success at the Group of Eight summit of industrialised countries.

"I hope the meeting will give a good boost to the G8 summit," Putin told Bush as the two leaders went into talks.

But just after the meeting began, a US trade spokesman said Russian and US trade negotiators had failed in marathon talks to strike a bilateral deal to open the way for Russian entry to the World Trade Organisation.

"A final agreement has not been reached, but significant progress was made," spokesman for US Trade Representative Susan Schwab, Sean Spicer, told Reuters.

The annual meeting of the Group of Eight industrialised nations has in the past attracted anti-globalisation protests, but tight restrictions and heavy policing have kept all but a few hundred activists away from Russia's second city.

Despite the setback on a WTO deal, president Bush and Putin were expected to announce an agreement to begin negotiations that could ultimately clear the way for Russia to import and store thousands of tonnes of spent nuclear fuel from US-supplied reactors around the world, aides said.

Energy Security

Energy security tops the summit's formal agenda and - once Bush and Putin are joined by leaders from France, Germany, Italy, Britain, Canada and Japan later in the day - the eight could seek to send a signal to calm volatile oil markets.

Bush signalled his intent to put democracy centre stage when he arrived on Friday, telling beleaguered Russian rights activists he would relay their concerns to Putin.

But he also said he would raise those concerns privately.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Friday night's meal had taken place in an 'exceptionally warm and frank atmosphere'. "It really was a very frank discussion," he said.

President Putin's critics accuse him of rolling back the democratic reforms of the 1990s.

The former KGB spy responds that the country he leads, a top oil and gas exporter with a booming economy, is a far cry from the chaotic nation that defaulted on its debts in the decade following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The Russian leader's main hope for the summit is to display his nation's new-found self-confidence.

The setting in a lavishly restored 18th century palace that looks out onto the Gulf of Finland underscores that revival.

Far from the heavily guarded summit venue, Saturday will also feature some small demonstrations.

The opposition Communist Party said it obtained permission to hold a rally in a central square to protest against joining the WTO and what it calls Moscow serving Western interests.

And a group of about 300 anti-globalisation protesters who have been given a distant sports stadium to rally inside planned to stage a 'break-out' from the arena later in the day, although organisers described it as a largely symbolic act.

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