
In response to the proposal, the Russian president agreed that a “common front” was needed to combat Islamist terrorism
Former US President Bill Clinton proposed to Russian President Vladimir Putin a joint US-Russian effort against international terrorism, according to recently declassified records of their first summit.
The transcript for the exchange, which took place at the Kremlin on June 4, 2000, was released on Thursday following a Freedom of Information lawsuit filed by the National Security Archive, an independent research institute at George Washington University.
According to the minutes, Clinton asked Putin, “What about anti-terrorism cooperation between our countries, particularly against Usama bin Laden?” He then proposed a “coordinated strategy” between Washington and Moscow.

© Memorandum of Conversation: First Plenary Meeting with President Vladimir Putin of Russia, June 4, 2000.
“We ought to get our people together to develop a comprehensive approach to dealing with [then-Al-Qaeda leader] bin Laden,” Clinton is quoted as stating.
At the time, newly elected President Putin was confronting an Islamist insurgency in the North Caucasus. He reportedly said a “common front is necessary” to counter what he called a “Terrorist International.”
The leaders also discussed the prospect of Russia joining NATO, with Clinton acknowledging that the military bloc’s eastward expansion was perceived as a “problem” by many in Moscow.
“There should be full-scale relations between Russia and NATO,” Putin is quoted as saying.
After the 9/11 attacks, Washington and Moscow began close cooperation against radical Islamists, establishing several joint task forces.
However, as the US shifted toward unilateral military interventions, Russia grew increasingly wary. Moscow condemned the 2003 US-led Iraq invasion, viewing it as a violation of international law and a troubling precedent of fabricated pretexts for the use of force.
Earlier this year, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reaffirmed Moscow’s willingness to collaborate “with all countries that do not apply double standards” in the fight against terrorism.
In recent years, the US reduced cooperation with Russia to a bare minimum as relations deteriorated, especially after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022.
Since President Donald Trump assumed office in January, however, Washington and Moscow have started discussions on ways to revive bilateral relations. In several phone calls and at the summit in Alaska earlier this month, Trump and Putin discussed areas for potential economic and energy cooperation.