In what could be an awkward situation, both U.S. President Barack Obama and Russia President Vladimir Putin will be in Normandy, France on Friday to mark the 70th anniversary of D-Day, a major turning point for the allied forces during World War II. The two leaders have not come face-to-face since Russia annexed Ukraine’s peninsular region, Crimea, and began amassing troops at the eastern border.
Initially, the White House said Obama will not meet one-on-one with Putin. But on Thursday, Obama left the possibility open.
“I have no doubt that I’ll see Mr. Putin. He and I have always had a business like relationship” said the commander-in-chief. “Obama added that he has a game plan in the event the two do chat. “I will be repeating the same message to him that I have throughout this crisis” that while Russia has a legitimate interest in what happens in Ukraine, “ultimately it’s up to the people of Ukraine to make their own decisions.”
For the first time in 17 years, Putin is being kept out of an annual summit of world leaders — though he has still managed to dominate the talks.
Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday announced that the G7 group of major economies was threatening further sanctions against Moscow if Putin does not take specific steps to ameliorate the rebellion in Ukraine. That includes recognizing Petro Poroshenko as the legitimately new leader of Ukraine, stopping the flow of arms and militants across the border and ending support for pro-Russian separatist groups in the country.
Putin, said Obama in Brussels, “has a chance to get back into a lane of international law.”









