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Wilmington: President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday discussed a downed passenger plane along the Russian-Ukraine border on Thursday during a phone call prompted by a new round of US economic sanctions against Moscow.
Obama doggedly went ahead with a day trip out of Washington as the Ukraine crisis flared anew, amid reports that 23 Americans were among the 285 people aboard the Malaysia Airlines plane that went down along the Russia-Ukraine border.
"Obviously, the world is watching reports of a downed passenger jet near the Russia-Ukraine border, and it looks like it may be a terrible tragedy. Right now we are working to determine whether there were American citizens on board," Obama said in brief remarks about the crash at the start of a speech about the US economy. Obama spoke in Wilmington, Delaware.
Before leaving the White House, Obama spoke by phone with Putin. On Wednesday, the United States imposed the most wide-ranging sanctions yet on Russia for its aggression in Ukraine.
The call had been requested by Moscow. As the two leaders spoke, the first reports of the crash emerged, and Putin brought them up with Obama at the end of the conversation, according to White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
Earnest, briefing reporters on Obama's Air Force One flight from Washington to Delaware, said Obama was briefed by his advisers on the crash and directed top US officials to remain in close contact with Ukrainian officials.
Vice President Joe Biden, who was traveling to Detroit, spoke on the phone with Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko. Biden offered assistance to help determine what happened to the downed Boeing 777 and why, the White House said. The crash injected an unpredictable element into the increasingly violent confrontation between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Obama, determined not to appear to be a hostage of world events, went ahead with his trip after warning Putin that the United States could impose more sanctions on Russia if Moscow does not take steps to de-escalate the Ukraine crisis.
He flew to Wilmington, where he ate a hamburger with a supporter, gave a speech about the need for more US infrastructure spending and planned to attend two Democratic fund-raising events in New York later.
The new round of US sanctions included penalties against Russia's largest oil producer, Rosneft and other energy, financial and defense firms.
Obama told Putin "additional steps are on the table if Russia doesn't change course," Earnest said.
"The United States is committed to ensuring that this international norm of countries respecting the territorial integrity of other countries is prioritized."
"The president's made clear that the international community, the United States and our European allies are willing to take steps and impose economic costs on Russia if they decline to respect those basic norms," Earnest said.
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