Russia-US spy chiefs discussed 'sensitive' questions, says Moscow
US Central Intelligence Agency Director William Burns and President Vladimir Putin's spy chief discussed "sensitive" questions when they met this week in Turkey, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said on Thursday.
Burns cautioned Sergei Naryshkin, head of Russia's SVR foreign intelligence service, about the consequences of any use of nuclear weapons, and about risks to strategic stability, the US side.
It was the first known high-level, face-to-face US-Russian contact since Russia invaded Ukraine in February. Burns, a former US ambassador to Russia, was sent to Moscow in late 2021 by President Joe Biden to caution Putin about Moscow's troop build-up around Ukraine.
"The contact (between Burns and Naryshkin) was initiated by the American side," Ryabkov told RTVI. "The questions discussed there were of a sensitive nature."
"Dialogue is going on but it is not of a systemic character," he said. "But we are not standing there with our hat in our hand: the Americans need dialogue with us just as much as we need it with them."
Ryabkov said more contact with the United States would take place later this month when a bilateral consultative commission on the New START arms treaty meets on 29 November to 6 December in Cairo.