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European leaders urge Trump to keep Russia sanctions Theresa May: US and Europe must keep up pressure on Russia
(about 5 hours later)
PM Theresa May and other European leaders have held talks with Barack Obama in Berlin on his farewell visit ahead of stepping down as US president. Theresa May has said the US and Europe are "united" in condemning atrocities in Syria and has warned Russia of the possibility of more sanctions.
The threat of so-called Islamic State and tackling Moscow over Ukraine are thought to have been on the agenda. The UK PM met outgoing US President Barack Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and four other European leaders in Berlin for talks.
On Thursday Mr Obama warned successor Donald Trump to stand up to Moscow if it deviated from US values. Mr Obama urged them to work with his successor Donald Trump on the basis of shared "core values".
Downing Street said it hoped to secure agreement to maintain Russian sanctions imposed over the conflict in Ukraine. The PM also told Mrs Merkel that the UK's Brexit plans were "on track".
US President-elect Mr Trump has criticised Nato and spoken of his hopes of warmer relations between the US and Russia. It came as the Supreme Court confirmed that Scotland and Wales's top legal advisers would be allowed to take part in an appeal hearing brought by the UK government against a ruling that it alone cannot trigger Article 50 - the formal process of leaving the EU - without a vote by MPs.
Mr Obama has been on a farewell trip to Europe at the end of his two terms as US president and met German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Mrs May, French President Francois Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy in Berlin on Friday. But BBC correspondent Jenny Hill said there were a number of issues on the agenda that took precedence over Brexit, including Syria, Russia's relationship with the West, international terrorism and climate change.
The European leaders were expected to warn his successor, Mr Trump, that now was not the moment to weaken sanctions against Russia, which were imposed in 2014 over the conflict in Ukraine. In a joint press conference with Chancellor Merkel on Friday, Mrs May said: "On Syria, looking at Aleppo, we are united in our condemnation of the atrocities that are taking place there.
BBC diplomatic correspondent James Landale said the Berlin summit had been the first chance for Europe's key leaders to discuss the impact of Mr Trump's victory in the US face to face and they were also aiming to establish a united front over Russia. "We agree on the need to keep up the pressure on Russia, including the possibility of sanctions on those who breach international humanitarian law."
Tackling the threat from IS - also known as Daesh - militants dispersing around the Middle East and northern Africa was also on the agenda. US President-elect Mr Trump has criticised Nato and has spoken of his hopes of warmer relations between the US and Russia - but on Thursday Mr Obama warned him to stand up to Moscow if it deviated from US values.
'Increasingly assertive' Mr Obama has been on a farewell trip to Europe at the end of his two terms as US president. On Friday he met German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Mrs May, French President Francois Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy in Berlin.
A Downing Street spokesman said: "As we close down Daesh's areas of operation in one part of the world we need to be mindful of the fact that they may regroup in other parts and how we set about tackling that. The White House said Mr Obama had "affirmed the importance of continued cooperation through multilateral institutions, including Nato" and "agreed on the necessity of working collectively to move the transatlantic agenda forward, particularly on bringing stabilisation to the Middle East and North Africa, as well as securing diplomatic resolution to the conflicts in Syria and eastern Ukraine.
"Obviously the issue of Daesh fighters who've been in either Syria or Iraq returning to Europe is a matter of great concern." On Brexit, Mrs May said: "Our work is on track, we do stand ready to trigger Article 50 by the end of March 2017.
It is thought Mrs May is likely to discuss Brexit with Mrs Merkel in separate talks on Friday. "I want to see this as a smooth process, an orderly process, working towards a solution that is in the interests of both the UK but also in the interests of our European partners too."
It comes as German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble told the Financial Times the UK may have to continue paying into EU budgets for more than a decade after it leaves the union. The meeting comes as German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble told the Financial Times the UK may have to continue paying into EU budgets for more than a decade after it leaves the union.
He said Britain will "certainly have to fulfil its commitments" to the EU until its departure - and possibly after.He said Britain will "certainly have to fulfil its commitments" to the EU until its departure - and possibly after.
He added: "Possibly there will be some commitments that last beyond the exit… even, in part, to 2030."He added: "Possibly there will be some commitments that last beyond the exit… even, in part, to 2030."