US and Russia seek to keep working ties despite Snowden and summit cancellation

US and Russian officials will seek to maintain a working relationship when they meet in Washington on Friday, even though the political mood between their countries has hit one of its lowest points since the end of the Cold War.
President Barack Obama’s cancellation this week of a summit in Moscow with President Vladimir Putin finally put to rest any notion that a much-vaunted “reset” of ties sought by the United States in recent years is alive.
Obama’s move came after Putin gave asylum to former US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, whose public flight after revealing US surveillance programs was a major embarrassment for Washington.
Influential Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham have sought a tougher response and have called on NATO to give membership to Georgia - with which Russia fought a brief war in 2008 - as part of an aggressive new policy against Moscow that would include weaning Europe off Russian energy supplies.
Senior US officials though have stressed the need to keep up cooperation with Moscow.