‘The Anger Dissipates Quickly’ – Washington Gets to Know Putin’s New Chief Negotiator

‘The Anger Dissipates Quickly’ – Washington Gets to Know Putin’s New Chief Negotiator

Putin’s new chief negotiator with the US, Kirill Dmitriev, met in the White House on Thursday with special envoy Steve Witkoff, and said that while “disagreements remain” with the administration of President Donald Trump, the two sides “discussed possible cooperation in the Arctic, in rare earth metals, in various other sectors where we can build constructive and positive relations.”

The White House did not comment on progress made with Dmitriev, the most senior Russian official to visit Washington since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Russia began in February 2022.

Dmitriev was born in Kyiv in 1975, but went to visit a host family in the US state of New Hampshire at the age of 14, and that same year went to live with family friends in California. He soon enrolled in a small college there and later transferred to Stanford University where he earned his Bachelor’s degree in economics. He then received his Masters in Business administration from Harvard University.

He went on to work as an investment banker at Goldman Sachs in New York and as a consultant at the similarly elite consulting firm of McKinsey & Company, doing stints in Los Angeles, Moscow and Prague. Dmitriev returned to Russia in 2000, and after working in private equity there for about a decade, he was appointed as CEO of the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), a sovereign wealth fund that invests in Russian companies.

The 49-year old is still the CEO of the RDIF.

In a video briefing with Russian journalists on Thursday, Dmitriev said the two sides “discussed possible cooperation in the Arctic, in rare earth metals, in various other sectors where we can build constructive and positive relations” and added that there was also “active work on restoring air travel, and we hope to make progress on this issue.”

“Of course, there are disagreements on various points, but there is a process, there is a dialogue, which in our understanding will help to overcome these disagreements,” Dmitriev said.

“It will take a number of more meetings for us to resolve all our differences,” he concluded. “The dialogue process, the resolution process, it’s going to take some time. But, at the same time, it’s definitely proceeding in a positive and constructive way.”

Dmitriev praised Trump’s tariffs on US allies, which caused a major sell-off in stock markets in New York, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down a devastating four percent on Thursday. The administration did not name Russia as a target of Trump’s trade war (while even completely uninhabited territories such as Australia’s Heard and McDonald Islands, along with Ukraine, were subjected to 10-percent tariffs.

Source: John Moretti