Vladimir Putin received Abbas Araghchi at the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library on St Petersburg's Senate Square on Monday 27 April, not at the Kremlin as the prior reporting had it , which had logged the meeting in line with the earlier Araghchi-Putin Kremlin framing 1. The Moscow Times logged Sergei Lavrov, presidential aide Yury Ushakov and Igor Kostyukov, head of the GRU (Russia's military intelligence directorate, the Main Directorate of the General Staff) in attendance. Russian state media had carried a Kremlin-facing readout on Sunday before the Moscow Times confirmed the St Petersburg venue on Monday.
The Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library is the federal archive opened in 2009 and named for Russia's first post-Soviet president, occupying the former Senate building on Senate Square in St Petersburg. Russia's working diplomatic protocol distinguishes Moscow visits, which signal alignment, from St Petersburg visits, which signal access without endorsement. Receiving a wartime foreign minister at an archive named for the president who dissolved the Soviet Union is a calibrated downward register from receiving him in the Kremlin's Catherine Hall. Russia is presenting itself as a strategic partner, not a co-belligerent.
Putin pledged Russia would do 'everything that serves your interests' to secure peace; Ushakov said Moscow would 'analyse the signals received from both Americans and Israelis'. CGTN's coverage of the meeting omits the Hengli Petrochemical designation entirely 2, which keeps the Russia-Iran solidarity story clean of the sanctions dispute. The venue, the supporting cast and the public statements line up: Moscow will host Araghchi, will brief on his behalf, and will not be photographed inside the Kremlin alongside an Iranian envoy on a war Russia has not entered. The downward shift from Kremlin to Yeltsin Library is the substantive Russian move on Day 60.
