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Russia, U.S. Agree on How Syria Should Eliminate Chemical Arms, Putin Says

APEC leaders grinning as they line up to take a group photo during a forum in Bali, Indonesia, on Tuesday. Dita Alangkara

Russia and the U.S. agree on how to eliminate chemical weapons in Syria, President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday after meeting U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

"We have a common understanding of what needs to be done and how. I am very glad that President  Obama is occupying this position [on chemical arms]," Putin said at the end of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation trade summit on the Indonesian island of Bali.

International experts charged with starting the process of verifying and eliminating chemical weapons arrived in Syria earlier this month. Russia, Syria's long-time ally and arms supplier, has offered to assist with the demolition process.

Putin said he believed experts from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, or OPCW, would be able to accomplish their goal of ridding Syria of its chemical arms within a year.

"We and the Americans, the whole international community trust them," he said. "If they are saying it is possible to do this [eliminate Syria's chemical arms] in one year, then that is the way it is."

The team of experts, supported by the United Nations, aim to oversee destruction of the Syria's chemical weapons production and mixing equipment by Nov. 1, and deal with all chemical weapons materials by the end of June 2014.

Putin praised Syria for cooperation on the plan to destroy its chemical arsenal, a deal brokered by Moscow and Washington last month amid a possibility of U.S. military strikes against the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

"The doubts regarding the readiness of the Syrian leadership to adequately respond to the decisions on chemical weapons proved to be unjustified," he said. "Syria has joined these efforts actively, is acting very transparently … and I hope this work will continue further at the same pace and in the same direction."

Relations between Washington and Moscow are strained by a number of issues, including remaining differences on Syria and Putin's record on human rights and democracy.

Russia has been a staunch supporter of Assad, whose fight against armed opposition groups has taken the lives of 100,000 people in more than two years. Moscow and Beijing have vetoed three U.N. resolutions intended to put pressure on Damascus.

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