World leaders meet as The growing crisis is expected to dominate a meeting originally set up to discuss on nuclear security. On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is to meet US Secretary of State John Kerry on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit for what may be their most tense talks to date. 'No more G-8' Kerry has already warned that British Prime Minister David Cameron said leaders from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States – minus current G-8 chairman Russia – must discuss the permanent expulsion of Russia from the group. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said last week the political conditions were not in place for a G-8 to exist, although her Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier later said she had been referring to the June G8 summit in Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte insisted on Sunday that the G-7 meeting would not detract from the aims of the two-day Nuclear Security Summit (NSS), with the G-7 talks to wind up on Monday evening. Leaders of 53 countries are gathering for the third bi-annual NSS, a brainchild of Obama, aimed at preventing a terrorist nuclear attack and reducing the world's non-military nuclear materials. World leaders should be free on Tuesday to discuss securing the world's stocks of nuclear material to prevent a group like al-Qaeda acquiring a nuclear or so-called 'dirty' bomb of conventional explosives wrapped in radioactive material. Rutte said leaders were expected to hammer out a so-called "nuclear security architecture" plan to ensure that nuclear material "did not fall into the wrong hands." South Korea, which hosted the 2012 NSS, the Netherlands and the US want to draw together best practice guidelines approved by the International Atomic Energy Agency for nuclear safety and security in a package that countries attending the summit can sign up to, although this is not expected to be included in the final statement. Nuclear security is central to Obama's political legacy and in 2009 he called nuclear proliferation "one of the greatest threats to international security." The final NSS is planned in |
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