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Angela Merkel and Vladimir Putin to hold meeting on Baltic Sea gas pipeline

The leaders will get together at Germany's state guest house this weekend to discuss a major energy deal criticised by Trump and the US government 

Adam Forrest
Monday 13 August 2018 10:40 EDT
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Merkel speaking at a news conference in Berlin, August 13
Merkel speaking at a news conference in Berlin, August 13 (Reuters)

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Germany this weekend to discuss a controversial Baltic Sea gas pipeline.

Ms Merkel’s spokesman announced that the two leaders are set to sit down together on Saturday at the German government's official guest house outside Berlin.

Moving ahead with the natural gas project Nord Stream 2 will be one of the main topics of discussion, despite opposition to the plan from the US and several eastern European countries.

Nord Stream 2 would add to an existing pipeline and increase the amount of natural gas Russia can send directly to central Europe, skirting countries to Germany’s east.

Ms Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said Germany still wanted Ukraine to “retain a role as a transit country” for Russian gas, but nothing had been agreed yet.

“The talks have not concluded,” he said.

The US government has made clear its security concerns about a new pipeline and has even threatened sanctions over the matter.

Earlier this year Sandra Oudkirk, US deputy assistant secretary of state for energy, warned it could pave the way for Russian surveillance equipment along the pipeline’s route in the Baltic Sea.

At last month’s Nato summit in Brussels, Mr Trump caused a stir by claiming Germany was a “captive of Russia.”

Mr Trump criticised Germany for expecting the US to “defend them against Russia” while making energy deals with Moscow worth “billions of dollars”.

“I think it’s something that Nato has to look at,” said Mr Trump. “Germany is totally controlled by Russia.”

Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg rejected Mr Trump’s argument and said Nato’s European countries “understand that when we stand together also in dealing with Russia, we are stronger”.

Ms Merkel and Mr Putin are also expected to discuss ending the Syrian conflict and the situation in eastern Ukraine this weekend.

The two leaders will each make statements before the start of the talks at the Meseberg palace on Saturday, but will take no questions.

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