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Keen to "reset" the damaged relations with Russia, US President Barack Obama said on Monday that the two countries have "more in common than they have differences" as his counterpart Dmitry Medvedev hoped that "complex pages" in the bilateral ties would be closed and a new leaf turned.
Welcoming Obama in the ornate Kremlin room in Moscow, the Russian President expressed hope that after their talks the
relations between the two former Cold War rivals would witness an upswing.
Obama, accompanied by wife Michelle and daughters Malia and Sasha, is here on a three-day maiden visit, which he had
said was aimed at re-setting the damaged ties with Russia.
Text: Vinay Shukla for PTI in Moscow
The two leaders were assisted by their Foreign Ministers and senior aides. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was replaced by Under Secretary of State William Burns as she is still recovering from an elbow injury she received after a fall on June 17.
Later this evening after their delegation level talks,Obama and Medvedev are expected to sign a framework communique on the reduction of their strategic nuclear weapons, which would be a sort of a roadmap to finalise the new legallybinding arms control pact to replace Cold War-era START-1 treaty, expiring in December, Kremlin Foreign Policy aide Sergei Prikhodko said.