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Newspapers: Swiss keen to host Biden-Putin meeting

Biden and Putin
Joe Biden (left, then Vice-President of the US) and Vladimir Putin (then Russian Prime Minister) in a file photo from 2011 Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved

Switzerland would like to host a possible upcoming summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his United States counterpart Joe Biden, according to reports in the Swiss media.

Overtures have already been made through diplomatic avenues, the Tages-Anzeiger newspaper said in its Saturday editionExternal link, citing anonymous diplomatic sources. The news was also picked up by the Neue Zürcher Zeitung.External link

When asked about the media reports, the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) said: “Switzerland is ready to offer its good offices when they are useful and desired. This also includes acting as host or facilitator organising conferences or meetings in Switzerland.”

“For confidentiality reasons, the FDFA cannot give any further details concerning specific cases,” a spokeswoman told SWI swissinfo.ch via email on Saturday.

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Biden, in a phone call to PutinExternal link last Tuesday, proposed a summit in the upcoming months to tackle a raft of disputes and told Moscow to reduce tensions over Ukraine triggered by a Russian military build-up. It is not yet clear if Putin will accept the summit offer.

Finnish president Sauli Niinistö and Austrian chancellor Sebastian KurzExternal link are also interested in hosting the summit in their countries, reportsExternal link say.

For Switzerland, Geneva may be a key location. The city was the scene of the legendary meeting between the then US President Ronald Reagan and the Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985. This is considered a turning point in the Cold War.

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Geneva remembers turning point in Cold War

This content was published on To mark the anniversary, Edouard Brunner attended a roundtable discussion, along with former Soviet premier Gorbachev, on Monday. As secretary of state for foreign affairs in the 1980s, Brunner was asked by the United States to organise the historic summit. It took place from November 19-21, 1985. At the time relations between the two superpowers…

Read more: Geneva remembers turning point in Cold War

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SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR