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SOCHI, Russia — One day before Russian President Vladimir Putin was set to receive President Bush this weekend for the last meeting between the two leaders, the former KGB agent allowed himself to reflect on the end of his presidency.
"These were complex years both in Russia's history and in the relations of Russia with its neighbors," Mr. Putin said of his eight years in office, at an hourlong press conference near the end of the NATO summit in Bucharest, Romania.
"These were years of the rebirth of Russia as a powerful and independent state with its own views, and the dialogue was and is not easy," he said.
Russia's resurgence as a world power and Mr. Putin's political muscle have been on display in the past few days, even as he prepares to hand over power, formally at least, to a handpicked successor next month.
Mr. Putin played gracious host to Mr. Bush and first lady Laura Bush at a three-hour dinner in his summer home last night on the Black Sea, but the White House announced there would be no hoped-for missile-defense deal with the Russians this weekend.
Mr. Putin's rebuff yesterday followed the NATO summit, where major U.S. allies in Europe, under pressure from the Kremlin, rejected Mr. Bush's pleas to invite two former Soviet republics into the alliance's membership process.
But in spite of the high-stakes diplomatic arm wrestling, Mr. Bush arrived here last night for a dinner with Mr. Putin. The mood was upbeat, friendly and even playful. The two leaders dined on venison fillet and red caviar, koulebyaka with salmon and king crab meat, and then joined a group of Russian dancers on stage during the postprandial entertainment.
Mr. Bush and Mr. Putin did "a Russian version of the African move," said White House press secretary Dana Perino, in a reference to Mr. Bush's now-famous dancing with an African troupe at the White House last summer.
Although Mrs. Perino said after the dinner that it had been "a really wonderful evening," she earlier had told reporters on Air Force One there would be no breakthrough on missile defense.
The U.S. plans to put radar systems and interceptor missiles in two former communist-bloc countries to counter possible nuclear proliferation in the Middle East. Russia wants to be able to inspect, monitor and have "equal access" to the facilities in Poland and the Czech Republic and also has suggested some of the system operations be run from Moscow. The U.S. is concerned such guarantees would violate Polish and Czech sovereignty.










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