Russian president
Boris Yeltsin and Ukrainian president
Leonid Kravchuk held Russian-Ukrainian summit in Dagomys on 23 June 1992, where they partially resolved their
dispute over
Black Sea Fleet, agreeing on a joint use of the bases in
Crimea and on division of
Black Sea Fleet, while postponing talks on how to apportion the 45 cruisers, 28 submarines, 300 small and medium-sized ships, 150 aircraft, and 85 helicopters in the fleet. Georgia has also claimed parts of the fleet. Russia and Ukraine also agreed on introduction of
hryvnia as Ukraine's new currency and to shift to world prices in their bilateral trade. They pledged to "work in concert to resolve violent conflicts in the region" and Yeltsin suggested a joint Russian-Ukrainian conference on
Transnistria conflict. The sides failed to reach agreement on the control of
nuclear weapons in Ukraine. Russia and Ukraine signed a general agreement on friendly ties and agreed to start negotiations on a new political treaty to confirm this relationship.
Vladimir Putin meeting with then
president of Georgia Eduard Shevardnadze and then
prime minister of Abkhazia Gennady Gagulia in
Sochi on 7 March 2003. In 2003, Russian president Vladimir Putin met Georgian president Shevardnadze and Abkhazian PM Gennady Gagulia and set in motion a Sochi process that sought to create a Georgian-Russian-Abkhaz working groups on
confidence building measures's (CBM). The parties sought to make it easier for the return of refugees and
economic reconstruction. The Sochi process signified a regress from the multilateral to a bilateral format that left Georgia on its own to face Russia and the Abkhaz. It also was seen to undermine Georgia's argument that the Geneva process was the sole format for a comprehensive settlement of the conflict. In 2004, Russia were seen to violate the agreement as a Russian company begun maintenance work on the Sochi-Sukhumi railroad, which was legally Georgian, though controlled by Russia and the Abkhaz. The move was seen as a violation whereby restoration could only proceed in parallel with the safe return of Georgian refugees to Abkhazia beginning with the Gali district. However, there had been no progress on the return of refugees, and so, unilateral Russian actions on the railroad violated the Sochi agreement. dead--> In 2008,
U.S. president George W. Bush and Putin made a last-ditch attempt as incumbent presidents to resolve a protracted dispute over European missile defenses at another Sochi summit. This followed Russian officials objecting to U.S. plans to deploy ballistic missile defenses (BMD) in Poland and the Czech Republic. They had claimed that the stated American justification for the BMD deployments—that the systems are needed to defend the United States and European countries against an emerging Iranian missile threat—lacked credibility. Instead, they insisted the true objective of such moves along Russia's periphery was to weaken Russia's nuclear deterrent. ==See also==