Russia’s Putin denies trying to be Iran-Israel mediator

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Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen on huge TV screens at the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen on huge TV screens at the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum.

PHOTO: AFP

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ST PETERSBURG, Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin on June 20 said he was not seeking to be a mediator between Iran and Israel, and was only suggesting ideas for how the countries could resolve the escalating crisis.

The Kremlin has spent much of the week positioning Moscow as a potential peacemaker after Israel launched strikes on Iran, which retaliated with missiles and drones.

But Western leaders have pushed back on a role for Mr Putin and earlier this week Moscow said Israel had shown little interest in its overtures.

“We are by no means seeking to act as a mediator, we are simply suggesting ideas,” Mr Putin said, at an economic forum in Saint Petersburg.

“If they turn out to be attractive to both sides, we will only be happy.”

While Moscow has condemned Israel’s strikes, Russia has not offered military help to its ally Iran and has downplayed its obligations under a sweeping strategic partnership agreement signed just months ago.

The foreign ministry on June 19 warned the United States against “military intervention” in the conflict, as it weighs joining Israel’s strikes against Iran.

And pressed multiple times to comment on Israel’s apparent threats to kill Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Mr Putin said on June 20: “I really hope that the things you mention remain at the level of rhetoric.”

Mr Putin spoke by phone with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian after Israel launched its strikes on June 20.

But the Kremlin said earlier this week that it saw a “reluctance, at least on the part of Israel, to resort to any mediation services or to embark on a peaceful path towards a settlement.”

US President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron have publicly pushed back at the idea of a mediation role for Mr Putin.

“He actually offered to help mediate, I said: ‘Do me a favour, mediate your own. Let’s mediate Russia first, okay?’” Mr Trump told reporters at the White House last week, referring to Russia’s conflict with Ukraine.

“I said ‘Vladimir, let’s mediate Russia first, you can worry about this later.’” AFP

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