Russian president Vladimir
Putin takes part in Valdai discussion club
meeting
It looks like we are
witnessing an attempt to enforce just one rule
whereby those in power – could live without
following any rules at all and could get away
with anything
Watch
Vladimir Putin took part
in the 19th Annual meeting of the Valdai
Discussion Club. The plenary session was held by
Valdai Club Research Director
Fyodor Lukyanov.
Transcript
Moderator of the Valdai Club’s plenary
session Fyodor Lukyanov: Good afternoon, Mr
President,
We look forward to seeing you every year,
but this year, perhaps, we were more impatient
than usual, since there are lots of issues
to discuss.
President of Russia Vladimir Putin:
I suppose so, yes.
Fyodor Lukyanov: The forum mainly
focused on matters related to the international
order, such as how the world is changing and,
most importantly, who, in fact, is at the helm
of the world, who runs it, and whether the world
is amenable to being run at all.
However, we are discussing this
as observers, but you have power, so please
share your thoughts with us.
Vladimir Putin: Thank you very much.
Ladies and gentlemen, friends,
I had a chance to get a sense of what you
discussed here during the last few days. It was
an interesting and substantive discussion.
I hope you do not regret coming to Russia
and communicating with each other.
I am happy to see you all.
We have used the Valdai Club platform
to discuss, more than once, the major
and serious shifts that have already taken place
and are taking place around the world, the risks
posed by the degradation of global institutions,
the erosion of collective security principles
and the substitution of “rules”
for international law. I was tempted to say “we
are clear about who came up with these rules,”
but, perhaps, that would not be an accurate
statement. We have no idea whatsoever who made
these rules up, what these rules are based on,
or what is contained inside these rules.
It looks like we are witnessing
an attempt to enforce just one rule whereby
those in power – we were talking about power,
and I am now talking about global power – could
live without following any rules at all
and could get away with anything. These are
the rules that we hear them constantly,
as people say, harping on, that is, talking
about them incessantly
The Valdai discussions are important
because a variety of assessments and forecasts
can be heard here. Life always shows how
accurate they were, since life is the sternest
and the most objective teacher. So, life shows
how accurate our previous years’ projections
were.
Alas, events continue to follow
a negative scenario, which we have discussed
more than once during our previous meetings.
Moreover, they have morphed into a major
system-wide crisis that impacted, in addition
to the military-political sphere, the economic
and humanitarian spheres as well.
The so-called West which is, of course,
a theoretical construct since it is not united
and clearly is a highly complex conglomerate,
but I will still say that the West has taken
a number of steps in recent years and especially
in recent months that are designed to escalate
the situation. As a matter of fact, they always
seek to aggravate matters, which is nothing new,
either. This includes the stoking of war
in Ukraine, the provocations around Taiwan,
and the destabilisation of the global food
and energy markets. To be sure, the latter was,
of course, not done on purpose, there is no
doubt about it. The destabilisation
of the energy market resulted from a number
of systemic missteps made by the Western
authorities that I mentioned above. As we can
see now, the situation was further aggravated
by the destruction of the pan-European gas
pipelines. This is something otherworldly
altogether, but we are nevertheless witnessing
these sad developments.
Global power is exactly what
the so-called West has at stake in its game. But
this game is certainly dangerous, bloody and,
I would say, dirty. It denies the sovereignty
of countries and peoples, their identity
and uniqueness, and tramples upon other states’
interests. In any case, even if denial is
the not the word used, they are doing it in real
life. No one, except those who create these
rules I have mentioned is entitled to retain
their identity: everyone else must comply with
these rules.
In this regard, let me remind you
of Russia's proposals to our Western partners
to build confidence and a collective security
system. They were once again tossed in December
2021.
However, sitting things out can hardly
work in the modern world. He who sows the wind
will reap the whirlwind, as the saying goes.
The crisis has indeed taken on a global
dimension and has impacted everyone. There can
be no illusions about this.
Humankind is at a fork in the road:
either keep accumulating problems and eventually
get crushed under their weight, or work together
to find solutions – even imperfect ones, as long
as they work – that can make our world a more
stable and safer place.
You know, I have always believed
in the power of common sense. Therefore, I am
convinced that sooner or later both the new
centres of the multipolar international order
and the West will have to start a dialogue
on an equal footing about a common future for us
all, and the sooner the better, of course.
In this regard, I will highlight some
of the most important aspects for all of us.
Current developments have overshadowed
environmental issues. Strange as it may seem,
this is what I would like to speak about first
today. Climate change no longer tops the agenda.
But that fundamental challenge has not gone
away, it is still with us, and it is growing.
The loss of biodiversity is one
of the most dangerous consequences of disrupting
the environmental balance. This brings me
to the key point all of us have gathered here
for. Is it not equally important to maintain
cultural, social, political and civilisational
diversity?
At the same time, the smoothing out
and erasure of all and any differences is
essentially what the modern West is all about.
What stands behind this? First of all, it is
the decaying creative potential of the West
and a desire to restrain and block the free
development of other civilisations.
There is also an openly mercantile
interest, of course. By imposing their values,
consumption habits and standardisation
on others, our opponents – I will be careful
with words – are trying to expand markets
for their products. The goal on this track is,
ultimately, very primitive. It is notable that
the West proclaims the universal value of its
culture and worldview. Even if they do not say
so openly, which they actually often do, they
behave as if this is so, that it is a fact
of life, and the policy they pursue is designed
to show that these values must be
unconditionally accepted by all other members
of the international community.
I would like to quote from Alexander
Solzhenitsyn’s famous Harvard Commencement
Address delivered in 1978. He said that typical
of the West is “a continuous blindness
of superiority”– and it continues to this day –
which “upholds the belief that vast regions
everywhere on our planet should develop
and mature to the level of present-day Western
systems.” He said this in 1978. Nothing has
changed.
Over the nearly 50 years since then,
the blindness about which Solzhenitsyn spoke
and which is openly racist and neocolonial, has
acquired especially distorted forms,
in particular, after the emergence
of the so-called unipolar world. What am
I referring to? Belief in one’s infallibility is
very dangerous; it is only one step away from
the desire of the infallible to destroy those
they do not like, or as they say, to cancel
them. Just think about the meaning of this word.
Even at the very peak of the Cold War,
the peak of the confrontation of the two
systems, ideologies and military rivalry, it did
not occur to anyone to deny the very existence
of the culture, art, and science of other
peoples, their opponents. It did not even occur
to anyone. Yes, certain restrictions were
imposed on contacts in education, science,
culture, and, unfortunately, sports. But
nonetheless, both the Soviet and American
leaders understood that it was necessary
to treat the humanitarian area tactfully,
studying and respecting your rival,
and sometimes even borrowing from them in order
to retain a foundation for sound, productive
relations at least for the future.
And what is happening now? At one time,
the Nazis reached the point of burning books,
and now the Western “guardians of liberalism
and progress” have reached the point of banning
Dostoyevsky and Tchaikovsky. The so-called
“cancel culture” and in reality – as we said
many times – the real cancellation of culture is
eradicating everything that is alive
and creative and stifles free thought in all
areas, be it economics, politics or culture.
Today, liberal ideology itself has
changed beyond recognition. If initially,
classic liberalism was understood to mean
the freedom of every person to do and say
as they pleased, in the 20th century
the liberals started saying that the so-called
open society had enemies and that the freedom
of these enemies could and should be restricted
if not cancelled. It has reached the absurd
point where any alternative opinion is declared
subversive propaganda and a threat to democracy.
Whatever comes from Russia is all branded
as “Kremlin intrigues.” But look at yourselves.
Are we really so all-powerful? Any criticism
of our opponents – any – is perceived
as “Kremlin intrigues,” “the hand
of the Kremlin.” This is insane. What have you
sunk to? Use your brain, at least, say something
more interesting, lay out your viewpoint
conceptually. You cannot blame everything
on the Kremlin’s scheming.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky prophetically foretold
all this back in the 19th century.
One of the characters of his novel Demons,
the nihilist Shigalev, described the bright
future he imagined in the following way:
“Emerging from boundless freedom, I conclude
with boundless despotism.” This is what our
Western opponents have come to. Another
character of the novel, Pyotr Verkhovensky
echoes him, talking about the need for universal
treason, reporting and spying, and claiming that
society does not need talents or greater
abilities: “Cicero’s tongue is cut out,
Copernicus has his eyes gouged out
and Shakespeare is stoned.” This is what our
Western opponents are arriving at. What is this
if not Western cancel culture?
These were great thinkers and, frankly,
I am grateful to my aides for finding these
quotes.
What can one say to this? History will
certainly put everything in its place and will
know whom to cancel, and it will definitely not
be the greatest works of universally recognised
geniuses of world culture, but those who have
for some reason decided that they have the right
to use world culture as they see fit. Their
self-regard really knows no bounds. No one will
even remember their names in a few years. But
Dostoevsky will live on, as will Tchaikovsky,
Pushkin, no matter how much they would have
liked the opposite.
Standardisation, financial
and technological monopoly, the erasure of all
differences is what underlies the Western model
of globalisation, which is neocolonial
in nature. Their goal was clear – to establish
the unconditional dominance of the West
in the global economy and politics. To do that,
the West put at its service the entire planet’s
natural and financial resources, as well as all
intellectual, human and economic capabilities,
while alleging it was a natural feature
of the so-called new global interdependence.
Here I would like to recall another
Russian philosopher, Alexander Zinoviev, whose
birth centenary we will celebrate on October 29.
More than 20 years ago, he said that Western
civilisation needed the entire planet
as a medium of existence and all the resources
of humanity to survive at the level it had
reached. That is what they want, that is exactly
how it is.
Moreover, the West initially secured
itself a huge head start in that system because
it had developed the principles and mechanisms –
the same as today’s rules they keep talking
about, which remain an incomprehensible black
hole because no one really knows what they are.
But as soon as non-western countries began
to derive some benefits from globalisation,
above all, the large nations in Asia, the West
immediately changed or fully abolished many
of those rules. And the so-called sacred
principles of free trade, economic openness,
equal competition, even property rights were
suddenly forgotten, completely. They change
the rules on the go, on the spot wherever they
see an opportunity for themselves.
Here is another example
of the substitution of concepts and meanings.
For many years, Western ideologists
and politicians have been telling the world
there was no alternative to democracy.
Admittedly, they meant the Western-style,
the so-called liberal model of democracy. They
arrogantly rejected all other variants and forms
of government by the people and, I want
to emphasise this, did so contemptuously
and disdainfully. This manner has been taking
shape since colonial times, as if everyone were
second-rate, while they were exceptional. It has
been going on for centuries and continues
to this day.
So currently, an overwhelming majority
of the international community is demanding
democracy in international affairs and rejecting
all forms of authoritarian dictate by individual
countries or groups of countries. What is this
if not the direct application of democratic
principles to international relations?
What stance has the “civilised” West
adopted? If you are democrats, you are supposed
to welcome the natural desire for freedom
expressed by billions of people, but no.
The West is calling it undermining the liberal
rules-based order. It is resorting to economic
and trade wars, sanctions, boycotts and colour
revolutions, and preparing and carrying out all
sorts of coups.
One of them led to tragic consequences
in Ukraine in 2014. They supported it and even
specified the amount of money they had spent
on this coup. They have the cheek to act as they
please and have no scruples about anything they
do. They killed Soleimani, an Iranian general.
You can think whatever you want about Soleimani,
but he was a foreign state official. They killed
him in a third country and assumed
responsibility. What is that supposed to mean,
for crying out loud? What kind of world are we
living in?
As is customary, Washington continues
to refer to the current international order
as liberal American-style, but in fact, this
notorious “order” is multiplying chaos every day
and, I might even add, is becoming increasingly
intolerant even towards the Western countries
and their attempts to act independently.
Everything is nipped in the bud, and they do not
even hesitate to impose sanctions on their
allies, who lower their heads in acquiescence.
For example, the Hungarian MPs’ July
proposals to codify the commitment to European
Christian values and culture in the Treaty
on European Union were taken not even
as an affront, but as an outright and hostile
act of sabotage. What is that? What does it
mean? Indeed, some people may like it, some not.
Over a thousand years, Russia has
developed a unique culture of interaction
between all world religions. There is no need
to cancel anything, be it Christian values,
Islamic values or Jewish values. We have other
world religions as well. All you need to do is
respect each other. In a number of our regions –
I just know this firsthand – people celebrate
Christian, Islamic, Buddhist and Jewish holidays
together, and they enjoy doing so as they
congratulate each other and are happy for each
other.
But not here. Why not? At least, they
could discuss it. Amazing.
Without exaggeration, this is not even
a systemic, but a doctrinal crisis
of the neoliberal American-style model
of international order. They have no ideas
for progress and positive development. They
simply have nothing to offer the world, except
perpetuating their dominance.
I am convinced that real democracy
in a multipolar world is primarily about
the ability of any nation – I emphasise – any
society or any civilisation to follow its own
path and organise its own socio-political
system. If the United States or the EU countries
enjoy this right, then the countries of Asia,
the Islamic states, the monarchies
of the Persian Gulf, and countries on other
continents certainly have this right as well.
Of course, our country, Russia, also has this
right, and no one will ever be able to tell our
people what kind of society we should be
building and what principles should underlie it.
A direct threat to the political,
economic and ideological monopoly of the West
lies in the fact that the world can come up with
alternative social models that are more
effective; I want to emphasise this, more
effective today, brighter and more appealing
than the ones that currently exist. These models
will definitely come about. This is inevitable.
By the way, US political scientists and analysts
also write about this. Truthfully, their
government is not listening to what they say,
although it cannot avoid seeing these concepts
in political science magazines and mentioned
in discussions.
Development should rely on a dialogue
between civilisations and spiritual and moral
values. Indeed, understanding what humans
and their nature are all about varies across
civilisations, but this difference is often
superficial, and everyone recognises
the ultimate dignity and spiritual essence
of people. A common foundation on which we can
and must build our future is critically
important.
Here is something I would like
to emphasise. Traditional values are not a rigid
set of postulates that everyone must adhere to,
of course not. The difference from the so-called
neo-liberal values is that they are unique
in each particular instance, because they stem
from the traditions of a particular society, its
culture and historical background. This is why
traditional values cannot be imposed on anyone.
They must simply be respected and everything
that every nation has been choosing for itself
over centuries must he handled with care.
This is how we understand traditional
values, and the majority of humanity share
and accept our approach. This is understandable,
because the traditional societies of the East,
Latin America, Africa, and Eurasia form
the basis of world civilisation.
Respect for the ways and customs
of peoples and civilisations is in everyone’s
interest. In fact, this is also in the interest
of the “West,” which is quickly becoming
a minority in the international arena as it
loses its dominance. Of course, the Western
minority’s right to its own cultural identity –
I want to emphasise this – must be ensured
and respected, but, importantly, on an equal
footing with the rights of every other nation.
If the Western elites believe they can
have their people and their societies embrace
what I believe are strange and trendy ideas like
dozens of genders or gay pride parades, so be
it. Let them do as they please. But they
certainly have no right to tell others to follow
in their steps.
We see the complicated demographic,
political and social processes taking place
in Western countries. This is, of course, their
own business. Russia does not interfere in such
matters and has no intention of doing so. Unlike
the West, we mind our own business. But we are
hoping that pragmatism will triumph and Russia’s
dialogue with the genuine, traditional West,
as well as with other coequal development
centres, will become a major contribution
to the construction of a multipolar world order.
I will add that multipolarity is a real
and, actually, the only chance for Europe
to restore its political and economic identity.
To tell the truth – and this idea is expressed
explicitly in Europe today – Europe’s legal
capacity is very limited. I tried to put it
mildly not to offend anyone.
The world is diverse by nature
and Western attempts to squeeze everyone into
the same pattern are clearly doomed. Nothing
will come out of them.
The conceited aspiration to achieve
global supremacy and, essentially, to dictate
or preserve leadership by dictate is really
reducing the international prestige
of the leaders of the Western world, including
the United States, and increasing mistrust
in their ability to negotiate in general. They
say one thing today and another tomorrow; they
sign documents and renounce them, they do what
they want. There is no stability in anything.
How documents are signed, what was discussed,
what can we hope for – all this is completely
unclear.
Previously, only a few countries dared
argue with America and it looked almost
sensational, whereas now it has become routine
for all manner of states to reject Washington’s
unfounded demands despite its continued attempts
to exert pressure on everyone. This is
a mistaken policy that leads nowhere. But let
them, this is also their choice.
I am convinced that the nations
of the world will not shut their eyes
to a policy of coercion that has discredited
itself. Every time the West will have to pay
a higher price for its attempts to preserve its
hegemony. If I were a Western elite, I would
seriously ponder this prospect. As I said, some
political scientists and politicians
in the United States are already thinking about
it.
In the current conditions of intense
conflict, I will be direct about certain things.
As an independent and distinctive civilization,
Russia has never considered and does not
consider itself an enemy of the West.
Americophobia, Anglophobia, Francophobia,
and Germanophobia are the same forms of racism
as Russophobia or anti-Semitism, and,
incidentally, xenophobia in all its guises.
It is simply necessary to understand
clearly that, as I have already said before, two
Wests – at least two and maybe more but two
at least – the West of traditional, primarily
Christian values, freedom, patriotism, great
culture and now Islamic values as well –
a substantial part of the population in many
Western countries follows Islam. This West is
close to us in something. We share with it
common, even ancient roots. But there is also
a different West – aggressive, cosmopolitan,
and neocolonial. It is acting as a tool
of neoliberal elites. Naturally, Russia will
never reconcile itself to the dictates of this
West.
In 2000, after I was elected President,
I will always remember what I faced: I will
remember the price we paid for destroying
the den of terrorism in the North Caucasus,
which the West almost openly supported
at the time. We are all adults here; most of you
present in this hall understand what I am
talking about. We know that this is exactly what
happened in practice: financial, political
and information support. We have all lived
through it.
What is more, not only did the West
actively support terrorists on Russian
territory, but in many ways it nurtured this
threat. We know this. Nevertheless, after
the situation had stabilised, when the main
terrorist gangs had been defeated, including
thanks to the bravery of the Chechen people, we
decided not to turn back, not to play
the offended, but to move forward, to build
relations even with those who actually acted
against us, to establish and develop relations
with all who wanted them, based on mutual
benefit and respect for one another.
We thought it was in everyone’s interest.
Russia, thank God, had survived all
the difficulties of that time, stood firm, grew
stronger, was able to cope with internal
and external terrorism, its economy was
preserved, it began to develop, and its defence
capability began to improve. We tried to build
up relations with the leading countries
of the West and with NATO. The message was
the same: let us stop being enemies, let us live
together as friends, let us engage in dialogue,
let us build trust, and, hence, peace. We were
absolutely sincere, I want to emphasise that. We
clearly understood the complexity of this
rapprochement, but we agreed to it.
What did we get in response? In short, we
got a ”no“ in all the main areas of possible
cooperation. We received an ever-increasing
pressure on us and hotbeds of tension near our
borders. And what, may I ask, is the purpose
of this pressure? What is it? Is it just
to practice? Of course not. The goal was to make
Russia more vulnerable. The purpose is to turn
Russia into a tool to achieve their own
geopolitical goals.
As a matter of fact, this is a universal
rule: they try to turn everyone into a tool,
in order to use these tools for their own
purposes. And those who do not yield to this
pressure, who do not want to be such a tool are
sanctioned: all sorts of economic restrictions
are carried out against them and in relation
of them, coups are prepared or where possible
carried out and so on. And in the end, if
nothing at all can be done, the aim is the same:
to destroy them, to wipe them off the political
map. But it has not and will never be possible
to draft and implement such a scenario with
respect to Russia.
What else can I add? Russia is not
challenging the Western elites. Russia is simply
upholding its right to exist and to develop
freely. Importantly, we will not become a new
hegemon ourselves. Russia is not suggesting
replacing a unipolar world with a bipolar,
tripolar or other dominating order, or replacing
Western domination with domination from
the East, North or South. This would inevitably
lead to another impasse.
At this point, I would like to cite
the words of the great Russian philosopher
Nikolai Danilevsky. He believed that progress
did not consist of everyone going in the same
direction, as some of our opponents seem
to want. This would only result in progress
coming to a halt, Danilevsky said. Progress lies
in “walking the field that represents humanity’s
historical activity, walking in all directions,”
he said, adding that no civilisation can take
pride in being the height of development.
I am convinced that dictatorship can only
be countered through free development
of countries and peoples; the degradation
of the individual can be set off by the love
of a person as a creator; primitive
simplification and prohibition can be replaced
with the flourishing complexity of culture
and tradition.
The significance of today’s historical
moment lies in the opportunities for everyone’s
democratic and distinct development path, which
is opening up before all civilisations, states
and integration associations. We believe above
all that the new world order must be based
on law and right, and must be free, distinctive
and fair.
The world economy and trade also need
to become fairer and more open. Russia considers
the creation of new international financial
platforms inevitable; this includes
international transactions. These platforms
should be above national jurisdictions. They
should be secure, depoliticized and automated
and should not depend on any single control
centre. Is it possible to do this or not?
Of course it is possible. This will require
a lot of effort. Many countries will have
to pool their efforts, but it is possible.
This rules out the possibility of abuse
in a new global financial infrastructure. It
would make it possible to conduct effective,
beneficial and secure international transactions
without the dollar or any of the so-called
reserve currencies. This is all the more
important, now that the dollar is being used
as a weapon; the United States, and the West
in general, have discredited the institution
of international financial reserves. First, they
devalued it with inflation in the dollar
and euro zones and then they took our
gold-and-currency reserves.
The transition to transactions
in national currencies will quickly gain
momentum. This is inevitable. Of course, it
depends on the status of the issuers of these
currencies and the state of their economies, but
they will be growing stronger, and these
transactions are bound to gradually prevail over
the others. Such is the logic of a sovereign
economic and financial policy in a multipolar
world.
Furthermore, new global development
centres are already using unmatched technology
and research in various fields and can
successfully compete with Western transnational
companies in many areas.
Clearly, we have a common and very
pragmatic interest in free and open scientific
and technological exchange. United, we stand
to win more than if we act separately.
The majority should benefit from these
exchanges, not individual super-rich
corporations.
How are things going today? If the West
is selling medicines or crop seeds to other
countries, it tells them to kill their national
pharmaceutical industries and selection.
In fact, it all comes down to this: its machine
tool and equipment supplies destroy the local
engineering industry. I realised this back when
I served as Prime Minister. Once you open your
market to a certain product group, the local
manufacturer instantly goes belly up and it is
almost impossible for him to raise his head.
That’s how they build relationships. That’s how
they take over markets and resources,
and countries lose their technological
and scientific potential. This is not progress;
it is enslavement and reducing economies
to primitive levels.
Technological development should not
increase global inequality, but rather reduce
it. This is how Russia has traditionally
implemented its foreign technology policy.
For example, when we build nuclear power plants
in other countries, we create competence centres
and train local personnel. We create
an industry. We don’t just build a plant, we
create an entire industry. In fact, we give
other countries a chance to break new ground
in their scientific and technological
development, reduce inequality, and bring their
energy sector to new levels of efficiency
and environmental friendliness.
Let me emphasise again that sovereignty
and a unique path of development in no way mean
isolation or autarky. On the contrary, they are
about energetic and mutually beneficial
cooperation based on the principles of fairness
and equality.
If liberal globalisation is about
depersonalising and imposing the Western model
on the entire world, integration is,
in contrast, about tapping the potential of each
civilisation for everyone to benefit. If
globalism is dictate – which is what it comes
down to eventually, – integration is a team
effort to develop common strategies that
everyone can benefit from.
In this regard, Russia believes it is
important to make wider use of mechanisms
for creating large spaces that rely
on interaction between neighbouring countries,
whose economies and social systems, as well
as resource bases and infrastructure, complement
each other. In fact, these large spaces form
the economic basis of a multipolar world order.
Their dialogue gives rise to genuine unity
in humanity, which is much more complex, unique
and multidimensional than the simplistic ideas
professed by some Western masterminds.
Unity among humankind cannot be created
by issuing commands such as “do as I do” or “be
like us.” It is created with consideration
for everyone’s opinion and with a careful
approach to the identity of every society
and every nation. This is the principle that can
underlie long-term cooperation in a multipolar
world.
In this regard, it may be worth revising
the structure of the United Nations, including
its Security Council, to better reflect
the world’s diversity. After all, much more will
depend on Asia, Africa, and Latin America
in tomorrow’s world than is commonly believed
today, and this increase in their influence is
undoubtedly a positive development.
Let me recall that the Western
civilisation is not the only one even in our
common Eurasian space. Moreover, the majority
of the population is concentrated in the east
of Eurasia, where the centres of the oldest
human civilisations emerged.
The value and importance of Eurasia lies
in the fact that it represents a self-sufficient
complex possessing huge resources of all kinds
and tremendous opportunities. The more we work
on increasing the connectivity of Eurasia
and creating new ways and forms of cooperation,
the more impressive achievements we make.
The successful performance
of the Eurasian Economic Union, the fast growth
of the authority and prestige of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organisation, the large-scale One
Belt, One Road initiatives, plans
for multilateral cooperation in building
the North-South transport corridor and many
other projects, are the beginning of a new era,
new stage in the development of Eurasia. I am
confident of this. Integration projects there do
not contradict but supplement each other –
of course, if they are carried out
by neighbouring countries in their own interests
rather than introduced by outside forces with
the aim of splitting the Eurasian space
and turning it into a zone of bloc
confrontation.
Europe, the Western extremity
of the Greater Eurasia could also become its
natural part. But many of its leaders are
hampered by the conviction that the Europeans
are superior to others, that it is beneath them
to take part as equals in undertakings with
others. This arrogance prevents them from seeing
that they have themselves become a foreign
periphery and actually turned into vassals,
often without the right to vote.
Colleagues,
The collapse of the Soviet Union upset
the equilibrium of the geopolitical forces.
The West felt as a winner and declared
a unipolar world arrangement, in which only its
will, culture and interests had the right
to exist.
Now this historical period of boundless
Western domination in world affairs is coming
to an end. The unipolar world is being relegated
into the past. We are at a historical
crossroads. We are in for probably the most
dangerous, unpredictable and at the same time
most important decade since the end of World War
II. The West is unable to rule humanity
single-handedly and the majority of nations no
longer want to put up with this. This is
the main contradiction of the new era. To cite
a classic, this is a revolutionary situation
to some extent – the elites cannot
and the people do not want to live like that any
longer.
This state of affairs is fraught with
global conflicts or a whole chain of conflicts,
which poses a threat to humanity, including
the West itself. Today’s main historical task is
to resolve this contradiction in a way that is
constructive and positive.
The change of eras is a painful albeit
natural and inevitable process. A future world
arrangement is taking shape before our eyes.
In this world arrangement, we must listen
to everyone, consider every opinion, every
nation, society, culture and every system
of world outlooks, ideas and religious concepts,
without imposing a single truth on anyone. Only
on this foundation, understanding our
responsibility for the destinies of nations
and our planet, shall we create a symphony
of human civilisation.
At this point, I would like to finish
my remarks with expressing gratitude
for the patience that you displayed while
listening to them.
Thank you very much.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Thank you very much,
Mr President, for such an all-encompassing
speech.
I cannot but spontaneously grasp at the
conclusion, as long as you mentioned the
revolutionary situation, those at the top and
those at the bottom. Those of us who are a bit
older studied all this at school. Who do you
associate yourself with, those at the top or the
bottom?
Vladimir Putin: With the bottom, of
course, I am from the bottom.
My mother was… As you know, I said it
many times that I come from a working family. My
father was a foreman, he graduated from a
vocational school. My mother did not receive
education, even secondary, she was a mere
worker, and had many jobs; she worked as a nurse
in a hospital, and as a janitor and a night
watchman. She did not want to leave me in
kindergarten or in nursery.
So therefore, I naturally am very
sensitive – thank God this has been the case
until now and, I hope, will continue – to the
pulse of what an ordinary person lives though.
Fyodor Lukyanov: So, on the global
level, you are among those who “don’t want to
[live in the old way]?”
Vladimir Putin: At the global level,
naturally, it is one of my responsibilities to
monitor what is going on the global level. I
stand for what I just said, for democratic
relations with regard to the interests of all
participants in international communication, not
just the interests of the so-called golden
billion.
Fyodor Lukyanov: I see.
Last time we met exactly a year ago. The
international environment was already tense, but
when we look at last October compared to this
one, it seems like an idyllic time. Much has
changed over the past year, the world has
literally turned upside down, as some say. For
you personally, what has changed over this year,
in your perception of the world and the country?
Vladimir Putin: What was happening
and what is happening now, say, as related to
Ukraine, these are not changes that are
happening just now or that began after the
launch of Russia’s special military operation,
no. All these changes have been happening for
many years; some pay attention to them, others
do not, but these are tectonic changes in the
entire world order.
You know, these tectonic plates, they are
in constant movement somewhere down there in the
Earth’s crust. Experts say that they are moving
now, and are always in motion yet everything
seems quiet, but changes are still happening.
And then, they collide. Energy accumulates and
when the plates shift, this causes an
earthquake. The accumulation of this energy and
its outburst have led to these current events.
But they have always happened. What is
the essence of these events? New centres of
power are emerging. I constantly say, and not
only me, is it really about me? They happen
because of objective circumstances. Some of the
previous centres of power are fading. I have no
desire to talk now about why it happens, but it
is a natural process of growth, decay, and
change. New centres of power are emerging,
mainly in Asia, of course. Africa is also taking
the lead. Yes, Africa is still a very poor
continent, but look at its colossal potential.
Latin America. All these countries will
definitely keep developing, and these tectonic
changes will keep happening.
We did not bring about the current
situation, the West did… If you have more
questions, I can go back to discussing the
developments in Ukraine. Did we carry out the
coup, which led to a series of tragic events,
including our special military operation? No, we
did not.
But what really matters is that tectonic
shifts are taking place now and will continue to
take place. Our actions have nothing to do with
that. Indeed, the ongoing events highlight and
promote the processes that are picking up pace
and unfolding more quickly than they did before.
But in general, they are inevitable, and would
have taken place regardless of Russia’s actions
towards Ukraine.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Speaking about the
state, have you learned anything new about it
over the past year?
Vladimir Putin: You know, as far as
the state is concerned… Of course, we have
incurred costs, above all, losses associated
with the special military operation, which I
keep thinking about all the time, and there are
economic losses as well. But there are enormous
acquisitions and what is happening now, will,
without any doubt, ultimately – I want to
emphasise this – will ultimately be beneficial
for Russia and its future.
What are these acquisitions about? They
are about the strengthening of our sovereignty
across all areas, primarily, in the economic
sphere. Not long ago, we ourselves were
concerned about our becoming some kind of
semi-colony where we are unable to do anything
without our Western partners. We cannot perform
financial transactions, we have no access to
technology and markets, or sources for acquiring
the latest technology. Nothing. All they need to
do is snap their fingers for all that we have to
fall apart. But no, nothing fell apart, and the
basis of the Russian economy and the Russian
Federation turned out to be much stronger than
anyone may have thought, maybe even ourselves.
This is an act of purification and
understanding of our capabilities, the ability
to quickly regroup given the circumstances and
the objective need not only to speed up the
import substitution processes, but also to
replace those who are leaving our market. It
turned out that in most areas our businesses are
replacing those that are leaving. Those who
depart are whispering in our ear: we are leaving
for a short while and will be back soon. Well,
how are they going to accomplish that? They are
selling multibillion-dollar properties for just
one dollar. Why? They are reselling them to the
management. What does this mean? It means they
have reached an agreement with the management
that they will return. What else could it be?
Are they gifting these businesses to two or
three individuals? Of course, not. We know this
sentiment.
So, this is critically important. We
ourselves have finally realised – we keep saying
that we are a great country – we have now
realised that we are indeed a great country and
we can do it.
We are fully aware of the mid-term
consequences of cutting access to technology.
But we did not have access to the critical
technology anyway. The COCOM lists that have
been in force for decades appear to have been
cancelled. Now, they have tightened the screws,
but it turned out what we are getting by,
nonetheless.
Another important component, this time of
a spiritual nature, which is, perhaps, the most
important part. First, this motto – we leave no
one behind – actually sits deep in the heart of
every Russian and in the other ethnic groups who
are Russian citizens, and the willingness to
fight for our own people solidifies society.
This has always been the great strength of our
country. We confirmed and reinforced it, which
is the most important thing.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Has any event in
Russia caused your disappointment this year?
Vladimir Putin: No.
Fyodor Lukyanov: So, we do not need
to draw conclusions and make any particular
changes?
Vladimir Putin: It is always
necessary to draw conclusions. If you are
referring to a personnel reshuffle, it is a
natural process. We must always think about
renewal in different areas, train new personnel,
and promote those who can deal with bigger tasks
than those they dealt with before. Of course,
this is a natural process. However, I cannot say
that somebody has disappointed me or should be
dismissed. No, of course, not.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Excellent.
Mr President, your decision to start a
special military operation in February came as a
big surprise for everyone, including the
majority of Russian citizens. We know that you
have described the logic and reasons for that
decision many times. However, decisions of this
importance are hardly made without a special
motive. What happened before you made the
decision?
Vladimir Putin: I have said this many
times, and you will hardly hear anything new
today. What happened? I will not speak about
NATO’s expansion to Ukraine, which was
absolutely unacceptable to us, and everyone knew
that but simply disregarded our security
interests. Yet another attempt we made late last
year failed again. We were told to shove it, to
be quiet and… Alright, I will not say this in so
many words, but they just ignored us. This is
the first point.
Second, it is important that
representatives of the Kiev regime, supported by
their Western handlers, refused to implement the
Minsk agreements. Their leader said that he did
not like a single provision of the Minsk
agreements. He said this in public! Other
officials said openly that they would not
implement them. The former [Ukrainian] president
said that he signed the Minsk agreements on the
premise that they would never be implemented.
What other reasons do you need?
It is one thing when the media and the
internet are used to plant some idea in the
heads of millions, but real actions and
practical policy are quite another matter. What
I have told you now went unnoticed by millions
of people, because it is lost in the information
space, but you and I are aware of it.
All that was eventually said. What did it
mean for us? It meant that we had to do
something in Donbass. People have been living
under shellfire for eight years, and the attacks
continue to this day, by the way, but we had to
take a decision for ourselves. What could it be?
We could recognise their independence. But
recognising their independence and leaving them
in the lurch was unacceptable. So, we had to
take the next step, which we did – to include
them in the Russian state. They would not have
survived alone, there is no doubt about that.
What if we recognise them and make them
part of the Russian state at their request, for
we know what people think, but the shelling and
military operations planned by the Kiev regime
continue and are inevitable? They have held two
large-scale military operations; it is true that
they did not succeed, but they were held. The
shelling would certainly have continued. What
could we do? Launch an operation. Why wait for
them to be the first to do it? We knew that they
were preparing to do it. Of course, this is the
inevitable logic of events.
We weren’t the ones who invented this
logic. Why did they need the 2014 coup d’état in
Ukraine in the first place? Yanukovych actually
agreed to resign and hold an early election. It
was clear that his chances – I hope Mr
Yanukovych won’t feel offended – his chances
were slim, if any. So what was the point of
staging a bloody anti-state and unconstitutional
coup in that situation? No idea. But there is
only one answer – to show who’s the boss.
Everyone – excuse me, my apologies to the ladies
– everyone sit quietly and keep your mouths
shut, just do what we say. I just can't explain
it any other way.
So they committed a coup d'état – but
people in Crimea or in Donbass refused to
recognise it, and that eventually led to today’s
tragic events. Why couldn’t the so-called West
fulfil the agreements that were reached in
Minsk?
They told me, personally – in that
situation, you, too, would have signed anything,
if you were put in such conditions. But still,
they signed it! They signed it and insisted that
the leaders of the republics of Donbass,
unrecognised at the time, put their signatures
on it, too. And then they just murdered one of
them – Zakharchenko.
All these actions led to today’s tragic
events, and that’s all there is to it.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Do you not have a
feeling that the enemy has been underestimated?
To be honest, this sentiment is present in
society.
Vladimir Putin: No. Do you know what
the problem is? We always saw what was happening
there.
For eight years, they have been creating
a fortified area that cut deep enough into
Donbass, and of course, venturing there and
suffering losses was pointless – this is the
first point. Secondly, we were well aware that
this process would continue, and it would be
getting worse, more difficult, more dangerous
for us, and we would suffer even more losses.
Those are the considerations we were guided by.
NATO’s development in that territory was in full
swing – and it keeps on going, just like it was
going on then. Those fortified areas would have
spread far beyond today’s contact line in
Donbass – they would have been everywhere.
That’s all there is to it.
What we see now, when our troops in
Donbass are putting the squeeze on from the
south and north, this is one thing. But if
fortified areas had continued to be built there
for several more years, throughout the country,
with personnel being trained and weapons systems
accumulating there (weapons they never had,
weapons many still do not have even now), the
situation would have been completely different
for Russia, even in terms of conducting this
special military operation.
Fyodor Lukyanov: You have repeatedly
said and written in your policy article that we
are one people. Have you changed your mind after
a year?
Vladimir Putin: No, of course not.
And how can this be changed? This is a
historical fact.
Russian statehood became established on
our territories in the 9th century, first in
Novgorod, then in Kiev, and then they grew
together. It is one nation. People spoke the
same language, Old Russian, and changes only
started to emerge, I believe, in the 14th or
15th century under Poland’s influence because
the western areas of the Russian state became
parts of other countries. This is where changes
came from.
Of course, I have already said that every
ethnicity goes through different processes in
its development. If part of this ethnicity
decides at a certain point that it has achieved
a level when it becomes a different ethnicity,
one can only respect it, of course.
But this process did not happen all on
its own. First of all, as I said, it happened
because some of Old Russian lands in the west
became parts of other states, for a whole number
of reasons.
Those states started promoting their
interests. The lands that became part of Poland
experienced a strong Polish influence, and so
on. The language started to change. I already
said that, when Ukraine was joining Russia,
letters were written to Warsaw and Moscow. We
have archives. Those letters said: “We, Russian
Orthodox Christians, would like to address you
with the following matter…” They asked Moscow to
accept them into Russia and asked Poland to
consider their interests and their Orthodox
Christian customs. And yet, they called
themselves “Russian Orthodox Christians.” I did
not make this up. It was part of the nation that
we now call Ukrainians.
Yes, then everything started happening
according to its own laws. An enormous Russian
Empire was built. European countries tried and
partially succeeded in creating a barrier
between Europe and the Russian Empire using the
principle known since the ancient times: divide
and conquer. They started making attempts to
divide the united Russian nation. It began in
the 19th century and eventually grew to a bigger
scale, supported mainly by the West. Of course,
they tried to cultivate certain sentiments in
people and some even liked it, when it comes to
historical and language aspects.
Of course, those sentiments were
exploited exactly for the purpose I mentioned,
to divide and conquer. It is nothing out of the
ordinary but they certainly achieved some of
their goals. And subsequently, it actually grew
into cooperation with Hitler during WWII, when
Ukrainian collaborators were used in campaigns
to exterminate Russians, Poles, Jews and
Belarusians. It is a well-known historical fact:
killing squads assigned Bandera followers with
the dirtiest and bloodiest jobs. It is all part
of our history. But it is also a historical fact
that Russians and Ukrainians are essentially one
ethnicity.
Fyodor Lukyanov: So what we are
witnessing is a civil war with a portion of our
own people.
Vladimir Putin: Partly, yes.
Unfortunately, we ended up in different states
for a number of reasons. Above all, because when
they were creating the Soviet Union after the
collapse of the [Russian] empire – I have
covered this in my articles and mentioned it
publicly more than once – the Bolshevik
leadership at the time decided – in order to
appease the nationalist-minded Bolsheviks
originally from Ukraine – to give them some
originally Russian historical lands without
asking the people who lived there. They let them
have all of Malorossiya (Little Russia), the
entire Black Sea region, and all of Donbass. At
first, they decided to make Donbass part of
Russia, but then a delegation from Ukraine came
to see Vladimir Lenin who then summoned a
representative from Donbass and told him the
Donbass matter should be reconsidered, and it
was, with the Donbass going to Ukraine.
In this sense, Ukraine, of course, is an
artificially created state. All the more so as
after WWII – this is also a historical fact –
Stalin suddenly made several Polish, Hungarian,
and Romanian territories part of Ukraine, thus
taking these lands away from these countries. He
gave the Poles, who were not part of the Nazi
coalition, some of the eastern German lands.
These are well-known historical facts. This is
how today’s Ukraine was created.
I just had a thought that, in fairness,
Russia, which created today's Ukraine, could
have been the only real and serious guarantor of
Ukraine’s statehood, sovereignty, and
territorial integrity.
Fyodor Lukyanov: I remember there was
a discussion about the guarantors back in the
spring, but then it all went away.
This may be a rhetorical question given
that hostilities and much more are underway, but
you and the Russian officials have said on
multiple occasions that the special operation is
going according to plan. What is the plan? Truth
be told, this is not very clear to members of
society. What is the plan?
Vladimir Putin: You see, I said at
the outset, on the day the operation started,
that the most important thing for us is to help
Donbass. I have already mentioned this, and if
we had acted differently, we would not have been
able to deploy our Armed Forces on both sides of
Donbass. This is my first point.
Second, the Lugansk People’s Republic has
been fully liberated. Military activities
related to the Donetsk Republic are underway.
Sure enough, when our troops approached it both
from the south and the north, it became clear
that the people residing on these historical
Novorossiya (New Russia) territories see their
future as part of Russia. How could we not
respond to that?
Hence, we are witnesses to the events
that have unfolded. They arose in the course and
as a logical follow-up to the situation that has
been taking shape up to this point. But the plan
was there, and the goal is to help the people of
Donbass. This is the premise under which we are
operating. Of course, I am aware of the General
Staff’s plans, but I do not think we should be
discussing the details.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Thank you.
Friends, I have satisfied my curiosity by
monopolising everything. Now, let us give the
floor to those with questions.
Let us begin. Ivan Safranchuk.
Ivan Safranchuk: Ivan Safranchuk,
MGIMO University.
You said that we have a very important
decade ahead in the development of the world and
our country. But I’m left with the impression
that a certain door exists that has led us to
this decade.
I have a question about this door.
Nuclear rhetoric has intensified greatly
as of late. Ukraine has moved from irresponsible
statements to the practical preparation of a
nuclear provocation; representatives of the
United States and the United Kingdom are making
statements with suggestions of the possible use
of nuclear weapons.
Biden, let’s say, speaks about nuclear
Armageddon, and straight away there are comments
in the US that there is nothing to fear. At the
same time, the United States is hurrying to
deploy modernised tactical nuclear bombs in
Europe. It looks like they are rattling the
sabre while refusing to acknowledge the lessons
of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Mr President, could you please comment,
is it true that the world is on the verge of the
possible use of nuclear weapons? How will Russia
act in these circumstances, given that it is a
responsible nuclear state?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Look, as long as
nuclear weapons exist, there will always be a
danger that they could be used. This is the
first thing.
Second, the goal of the current fuss
around such threats and the potential use of
nuclear weapons is very primitive, and I would
probably be not mistaken when I explain what
this is about.
I already said that the dictate of the
Western countries and their attempts to apply
pressure on all the participants of
international communication, including countries
that are neutral or friendly to us, are
achieving nothing, and they are looking for
additional arguments to convince our friends or
neutral states that they all need to confront
Russia collectively.
Nuclear provocation and the inflaming of
the possibility that Russia might theoretically
use nuclear weapons are being used to reach
these goals: to influence our friends, our
allies, and neutral states by telling them, look
at whom you support; Russia is such a scary
country, do not support it, do not cooperate
with it, do not trade with it. This is, in fact,
a primitive goal.
What is happening in reality? After all,
we have never said anything proactively about
Russia potentially using nuclear weapons. All we
did was hint in response to statements made by
Western leaders.
Ms Liz Truss, the recent Prime Minister
of Great Britain, directly stated in a
conversation with a media representative that
Great Britain is a nuclear power and the Prime
Minister's duty is to possibly use nuclear
weapons, and she will do so. It's not a quote,
but close to the original wording. “I'm ready to
do that.”
You see, no one responded to that in any
way. Suppose she just spaced out and let it
slip. How can you say such things publicly? She
did, though.
They should have set her straight, or
Washington could have publicly stated that it
has nothing to do with this. We have no idea
what she is talking about, they could have said.
There was no need to hurt anyone’s feelings; all
they had to do was dissociate themselves from
what she said. But everyone was silent. What are
we supposed to think? We thought it was a
coordinated position and that we were being
blackmailed. What are we supposed to do? Remain
silent and pretend that we did not hear
anything, or what?
There are several other statements about
this matter. Kiev never stops talking about its
desire to possess nuclear weapons. This is the
first part of the Ballet de la Merlaison. So?
They keep talking about our outrageous
actions at the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant.
What is so outrageous about it? That is how they
word it sometimes. They are constantly
insinuating that we are firing missiles at the
Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant. Have they lost
it altogether, or what? We are in control of
this nuclear power plant. Our troops are
stationed there.
A couple of months ago, I talked with a
Western leader. I asked him what we should do.
He told me we needed to remove heavy weapons
from the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant. I
agreed and said that we had already done so and
there were no heavy weapons there. “You did?
Well, then remove the other ones.” (Laughter.)
It is nonsense, you see? You are
laughing, it is funny, indeed. But it is almost
verbatim what he said.
I told him, listen, you wanted the IAEA
representatives to be present at the station. We
agreed, and they are there.
They live right on the grounds of the
nuclear power plant. They see with their own
eyes what is going on, who is shooting and where
the shells are coming from. After all, no one is
saying that Ukrainian troops are shelling the
nuclear power plant. And they are stirring
things up and blaming Russia for this. That is
delusional. It looks like a delusion, but it is
actually happening.
I think I have already publicly said that
the Kiev regime’s sabotage groups had destroyed
three or four high-voltage overhead power lines
outside the Kursk Nuclear Power Plant.
Unfortunately, the FSB was unable to catch them.
Hopefully, it will someday. They escaped. But
they were the ones who did it.
We let all Western partners know about
the incident. Silence was all we got in
response, as if nothing happened. That is, they
are seeking to stage some kind of a nuclear
incident in order to lay responsibility on
Russia and stir up a new round of their battle
against Russia, sanctions against Russia, and so
on. I just do not see any other point in doing
so. This is what is happening.
Now they have invented something new. It
was no accident that we went public about the
information from our security services that they
are preparing an incident with the so-called
dirty bomb. Such a bomb is easy to make, and we
even know its approximate location. Slightly
modified remains of nuclear fuel – Ukraine has
the technologies needed to do that – are loaded
into the Tochka-U, it blows up and they say that
it was Russia that made a nuclear strike.
But we have no need to do so; there is no
sense in it for us, neither political nor
military. But they are going to do it,
nevertheless. It was me who instructed [Defence]
Minister [Sergei] Shoigu to call all his
colleagues and inform them about it. We cannot
disregard such things.
Now they say that the IAEA wants to come
and inspect Ukraine’s nuclear facilities. We
encourage this, and we believe that it should be
done as soon as possible and the inspections
should be at all such facilities, because we
know that the Kiev authorities are doing their
best to cover their tracks. They are working on
it.
Finally, about using or not using
[nuclear weapons]. The only country in the world
which has used nuclear weapons against a
non-nuclear state was the United States of
America; they used it twice against Japan. What
was the goal? There was no military need for it
at all. What was the military practicability to
use nuclear weapons against Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, against civilians? Had there been a
threat to the US territorial integrity? Of
course not. It was not practical from the
military point of view either, because Japan’s
war machine had already been destroyed, it was
not able to resist, so what was the point in
dealing the final blow with nuclear weapons?
By the way, Japanese textbooks usually
say that it was the Allies that struck a nuclear
blow at Japan. They have such a firm grip over
Japan that the Japanese cannot even write the
truth in their school textbooks. Even though
they commemorate this tragedy every year. Good
for the Americans, we should all probably follow
their example. Great job.
But such things happen, this is life. So,
the US is the only country that has done it
because it believed it was in its interests.
As for Russia…We have the Military
Doctrine, and they should read it. One of its
articles explains the cases when, why, in
relation to what and how Russia considers it
possible to use weapons of mass destruction in
the form of nuclear weapons to protect its
sovereignty, territorial integrity and to ensure
the safety of the Russian people.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Tomorrow it will be
60 years since the culmination of the Caribbean
crisis, the day when it was decided to retreat.
Can you imagine yourself in the role of
one of the leaders, Khrushchev, to be more
precise? Can we get to that point?
Vladimir Putin: Certainly not.
Fyodor Lukyanov: It won’t come to
this?
Vladimir Putin: No, I cannot imagine
myself in the role of Khrushchev. No way.
(Laughter.)
Fyodor Lukyanov: All right. And what
about the role of a leader who has to make a
decision on this issue?
Vladimir Putin: We are ready to
settle any issues. We are not refusing. Last
December we offered the United States to
continue the dialogue on strategic stability but
received no response. It was in December of last
year. Silence.
If they want to, we are ready, let’s do
it. If they do not want to, we are developing
our own modern technology, delivery vehicles,
including supersonic arms. In principle, we do
not need anything. We feel self-sufficient.
Yes, of course, at one time they will
catch up with us in supersonic weapons as well.
This is obvious, they have a high-tech country
and it is only a matter of time. But they have
not yet caught up with us. We have everything
and we are developing this technology. If
someone wants to conduct dialogue with us about
this, we are ready, go ahead.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Rasigan Maharajh, go
ahead, please.
Rasigan Maharajh: Thank you very
much.You have answered a direct point that I
raised earlier but, if I could expand upon what
I had asked.
Escalating and accelerating crises
continue to further reveal the precarious
position we are in and what our system currently
is driving us towards. So, unequal exchange
continues, as you pointed out, in equities
distribution, especially of human capacity,
capability and competence, and render future
prospects of reconciliation and reform inside an
unfair hegemonic system extremely bleak.
Sanctions, fear of reprisals have rendered
monetary sovereignty meaningless, especially
with the weaponisation of the payment system. In
our contemporary conjuncture, what could then
constitute a more democratic and workable
alternative to the current international system
of payments and settlements?
Vladimir Putin: This is one of the
key issues of the current development and the
future of not only the financial system, but
also the world order. You have just hit the
bull’s eye.
After World War II, the United States
created the Bretton Woods system and made it
several times stronger over the years. They
worked in different areas and established
international institutions that are under their
control in both finance and international trade.
But they are obviously breaking down.
As I have already said, the United States
made a huge mistake by using the dollar as a
weapon in fighting for its political interests.
This undermines trust in the dollar and other
reserve currencies. The loss of trust is big –
believe me, I know what I am talking about. Now
everyone is thinking whether it makes sense to
keep foreign currency reserves in dollars.
It is not so simple to part with the
dollar because the Americans have created a very
powerful system that keeps these reserves and
actually does no let them out. It is very
difficult to get out but everyone has started
pondering over the future. I have already
described this and can only repeat what we think
about the future of the international financial
system.
First, this is a common understanding,
but still: all countries must be guaranteed
sovereign development, and any country’s choice
must be respected. This is also important, even
in relation to the financial system. It should
be independent, depoliticised, and, of course,
it should rely on the financial systems of the
world's leading countries.
And if this system is created (this will
not be easy, it is a difficult process, but it
is possible), the international institutions
(they will need to be either reformed or
recreated) helping those countries that need
support will work more effectively.
First of all, this new financial system
should pave the way for education and technology
transfer.
If we put this together, collect a
palette of opportunities that need to be taken,
then this economic model and financial system
will meet the interests of the majority, and not
only the interests of this “golden billion,”
which we talked about.
As a forerunner of this system, we
certainly need to expand payments in national
currencies. Given that the US financial
authorities are weaponizing the dollar and
creating problems with payments not only for us,
but also for our partners and other countries,
the striving for independence will inevitably
promote settlements in national currencies.
For example, with India, we are now
making 53 percent of mutual payments for exports
in national currencies, and about 27 percent for
imports. Similar arrangements with other
countries are being increasingly used. For
example, with China, payments in yuan and rubles
are expanding fast, and with other countries,
too – I will not list them all now.
So, as for our own financial system, I
believe the main way to proceed is to create a
supranational global monetary system that would
be depoliticised and based on national currency
systems. This system would certainly ensure
payments and transactions. It's possible. In the
end, one way or another, we have taken the first
steps towards payments in national currencies,
and then – steps at the regional level. I
believe this process will continue.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Colleagues, please,
when you ask questions, introduce yourself.
Rasigan Maharajh, South Africa. So that everyone
understands.
Alexander Iskandaryan.
Alexander Iskandaryan: Mr President,
I am from Armenia and my question concerns my
country and my region.
The discussion of a treaty between
Armenia and Azerbaijan has become more intense
lately, and this is mainly due to the fact that
there are two competing drafts: a Russian draft
proposed by the Russian intermediary, and a
Western draft. This situation is quite risky, in
addition to the other risks in the region. There
are certain tensions.
What does Russia think and how does
Russia plan to respond to this situation and act
in the future in this context?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: You see, I do not
even know if this has been discussed publicly
before – maybe yes, maybe no – but, even if it
has not been discussed, I do not see any secrets
here.
For many years, we have continued the
dialogue with Armenia, proposing to settle the
Nagorno-Karabakh matter. Armenia de facto
controlled seven areas in Azerbaijan. And we
suggested moving towards normalising relations.
There are two areas, Kalbajar and another one
further to the south, with corridors, large
areas. At a certain point we could make an
agreement with Azerbaijan and it would give away
five areas. They are not necessary, there is no
use for them. They just sit empty as people have
essentially been expelled from those
territories. Why keep them? There is no point.
While for connections with Nagorno-Karabakh, two
areas, huge areas, by the way, should be enough.
We believe it would be fair to bring back
the refugees and so on. It would be a good step
towards normalising the situation in the region
in general. Armenian leadership decided to
pursue its own course, which, as we know, has
resulted in the situation we have today.
Now, as concerns the settlement and the
peace treaty, our position is that, of course,
there must be a peace treaty. We support a
peaceful settlement, delimitation of the border
and a full resolution to the border issue. The
question is, which option should be chosen. It
is up to Armenia, the Armenian people and
Armenian leadership. At any rate, whatever they
choose, we will support it as long as it brings
peace.
But we have no intention of imposing
anything or dictating anything to Armenia. If
the Armenian people or the Armenian leaders
believe they should decide on a specific version
of the peace treaty… As far as I understand, the
Washington draft provides for recognising
Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh.
If Armenia chooses that, so be it. We will
support any choice the Armenian people make.
If the Armenian people and leaders
believe that Nagorno-Karabakh has certain
peculiarities that should be considered in a
future peace treaty, this is also possible. But,
without a doubt, this is a matter of agreement
between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The agreements
must be acceptable to the other party as well,
to Azerbaijan. It is a very difficult question,
no less.
But Armenia is our strategic partner and
ally, and of course, we will, to a great extent,
bearing in mind Azerbaijan’s interests, be
guided by what Armenia itself is proposing.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Two years ago, you
spoke highly about President Erdogan at the
Valdai Club meeting, saying that he did not go
back on his words but did what he said he would
do. Many things have happened over the past two
years. Has your opinion of him changed?
Vladimir Putin: No. He is a competent
and strong leader who is guided above all, and
possibly exclusively, by the interests of
Turkiye, its people and its economy. This
largely explains his position on energy issues
and, for example, on the construction of
TurkStream.
We have proposed building a gas hub in
Turkiye for European consumers. Turkiye has
supported this idea, of course, first of all,
based on its own interests. We have many common
interests in tourism, the construction sector
and agriculture. There are many areas where we
have common interests.
President Erdogan never lets anyone get a
free ride or acts in the interests of third
countries. He upholds above all the interests of
Turkiye, including in dialogue with us. In this
sense, Turkiye as a whole and personally
President Erdogan are not easy partners; many of
our decisions are born amid long and difficult
debates and negotiations.
But there is a desire on both sides to
reach agreements, and we usually do it. In this
sense, President Erdogan is a consistent and
reliable partner. This is probably his most
important trait, that he is a reliable partner.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Has he ever tried to
get a free ride, for example, from you?
Vladimir Putin: You see, I have already
noted that the President of Turkiye is not an
easy partner, that he always upholds his
interests, not his personal interests but the
interests of his country, but it cannot be said
that he has ever tried to get a free ride.
He simply works towards a solution that
is the best one, in the opinion of his
government. We work towards solutions that will
be the best for us. As I said, we usually find a
solution even on very delicate issues, such as
Syria, security issues and the economy,
including infrastructure. So far, we have
managed to do it.
I will repeat that this is extremely
important. We know that if we have covered a
difficult path and it is difficult to come to an
agreement, but we reached it nevertheless, we
can rest assured that it will be implemented.
The most important thing is reliability and
stability in our relations.
Dayan Jayatilleka: Thank you. My name
is Dayan Jayatilleka, former ambassador of Sri
Lanka to the Russian Federation.
Mr President, it is said that Russia is
now facing a proxy war waged by the collective
West and NATO. If so, it is probably the most
serious threat faced by Russia since 1941. At
that time, during the Great Patriotic War, the
Soviet leader, who was a Communist, reached out
to the Orthodox Church and to Russian
nationalism in order to form a broad front to
defend Russia. Would you say that, in a similar
spirit, you would revisit the Soviet Russian
past, the Communist heritage from 1917 to
extract any useful elements of it, including the
history of the Red Army, and would you think it
worthwhile to reach out to the Communist
elements, however few they are, in Russia to
join in a broad patriotic front? Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: As for my position, I
believe we should use our entire historical
heritage. I don’t think we should reject
anything – the positive aspects of the tsarist
empire in Russian history nor the positive facts
in the history of the Soviet Union, which had
many positive traits. There were also negatives
in both cases – they were overcome in different
ways and had different consequences.
As for relations with the left part of
our political spectrum and other political
trends… You know, the peculiarity of today’s
Russia is the practically complete consensus on
the countering of external threats. Yes, there
are some people with a completely pro-Western
orientation, and they live abroad for the most
part; they are mentally abroad, their families
are abroad and their children study abroad. Yes,
we have a few of them, but they have always been
here and they always exist in all countries –
there is nothing unusual about this. But
overall, consolidation is very high regardless
of the political slant or views on ways to
develop Russia as such.
People with communist convictions believe
we need to nationalise everything again. They
want everything governmentalized, etc. It is
hard to say how effective this would be. We do
not reject this in some things and some places,
in some specific historical situations, and we
even have a law on nationalisation. That said,
we are not doing this – there is no need for
this whatsoever.
We believe in the need to use the most
effective tools for national development, market
principles but under the control, of course, of
the state, government power, under the control
of the people. We should use these advantages to
achieve our main goals – improve the nation’s
wellbeing, counter poverty, step up our efforts
and achieve better results in housing
construction, education, healthcare and the
resolution of other issues that are vital to
people.
So, in our work, we treat people who have
left-wing views with respect, including those
with communist convictions. As you said, and
with good reason, the Soviet Union lived for a
long time under the control and guidance of the
Communist Party. At this point, I do not wish to
go into detail and explain what was good and
what was bad.
You mentioned religious organisations,
but all of them – we have four traditional
religions – are exclusively patriotic. As for
the Russian Orthodox Church, it has been with
its congregation, with its people throughout its
entire history. The same is true today.
The key difference in today’s relations
with our traditional religions is probably that
we really – not just outwardly – abstain from
interfering in the life of religious
organisations. Maybe, they are in this country
in a much freer position than in many states
that consider themselves democratic. We never
exert any pressure on them. We believe we are in
debt to them because during the Soviet years
their property was squandered or taken abroad
and sold, and so on. In other words, a lot of
damage was inflicted on religious organisations,
including the Russian Orthodox Church.
We try to support all our religions, but
we do not interfere in their work. And, probably
what is happening now is truly unique – there is
a common patriotic mood related to the country’s
development within our state and the maintenance
of our interests outside, but given these
factors, we give them complete freedom of
activity. I think this relationship, this
situation is producing the desired results.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr Kubat Rakhimov,
you have the floor.
Kubat Rakhimov: I am Kubat Rakhimov
from the Kyrgyz Republic.
Mr President,
Russia is indeed the leader of a new
anti-colonial movement. Russia’s commitment to
traditional, conservative values also receives
global support. During the discussions here at
the Valdai Club, we have seen very high demand
for social justice and for an equitable
organisation of social relations.
How do you see this, and how can we help
you as Valdai Club experts? This is my first
question.
My second question is, what do you think
of the possibility of relocating the capital of
the Russian Federation to the centre of the
country, that is, to the centre of the Eurasian
continent, so it can be closer to countries in
the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Regarding a more
equitable social system in Russia, our
Constitution states expressly that Russia is a
social welfare state. And of course, everything
we do, all our national development goals are
basically to accomplish social objectives. We
could discuss these issues for hours, and even
all day today would not be enough. Everything we
do is designed to accomplish this, to accomplish
the social objectives now facing the Russian
state. We have many goals like this, including
many unsolved problems.
I have already discussed this, but again,
we need to develop the economy, to address
healthcare, education and technological
development issues on this basis and to
restructure our economy. Structural changes are
the most important thing. The labour market will
change, and in this connection, we should, of
course, think about those people whose jobs will
be eliminated. We should provide them with new
competences and retrain them, etc.
Regarding the Valdai Club, it brings
together experts from various walks of life. Of
course we would be grateful if these experts
would update us on key development trends. We
would listen to your opinions while making the
plans I just listed. We can and must build upon
our current policies while understanding future
developments.
With respect to moving the capital, yes,
we have talked about this. The Russian capital
has been moved several times in the history of
the Russian state. Historically and mentally,
the centre of Russia is always associated with
Moscow and, in my opinion, there is no need…
There are problems in the capital’s
development as a metropolitan area, but I must
say that, with Mayor Sobyanin’s team, these
problems are addressed and resolved much better
than in many other countries and metropolitan
areas.
There was a period when issues of
transport, social infrastructure development and
other areas were serious – and they still are,
to a certain extent. But still, in recent years,
Mayor Sobyanin has done a great deal to curb
these challenges and to create conditions for
Muscovites, people who relocate for work and
tourists to feel comfortable. A lot has been
done for the city’s development in the past few
years.
There is indeed a problem of excessive
centralisation of all federal organisations in
Moscow. For example, I support the approach
certain other countries take, specifically, to
decentralise authority and competence to other
Russian regions. For example, we are building a
judicial centre in St Petersburg. The
Constitutional Court is already based there, and
there are specific plans concerning the Supreme
Court. No haste is necessary; this work should
be done gradually, creating favourable
conditions for the judicial community to work in
St Petersburg. And we will do it with no rush.
Some major companies that, say, mainly
operate in Siberia but have head offices in
Moscow, could move their headquarters to
Siberia. And it is actually happening. RusHydro,
for example, is establishing a base in Siberia,
in Krasnoyarsk, building a head office there.
Certain federal government bodies could
be distributed across the country. It would be
beneficial for the governance system itself and
the regions where these bodies would be based.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Thank you.
Ivan Timofeyev.
Ivan Timofeyev: Good evening, Mr
President.
Ivan Timofeyev, Valdai Club.
Here is my question. An unprecedented
number of sanctions has been imposed on Russia
in the past year. You mentioned the freezing of
our reserves in Europe, 300 billion. We could
also add the freezing of citizens’ and
organisations’ properties worth tens of
billions. By the way, Europe plans to seize
these properties, once the respective mechanisms
are developed. There is much more, including
financial restrictions, prohibited supplies of
goods, technologies, Russian oil bans, gas
supply manipulation and other measures. We are
well aware of these, and you mentioned them in
your speech.
Our economy was not expected to hold out.
But it has survived, largely because it remains
a market economy, it remains flexible and
adaptive. Businesses are looking for new markets
and searching for ways to implement import
substitution wherever possible. The Government
is taking many steps to help businesses.
But, maybe, considering the extreme
foreign policy conditions and all the sanctions,
it is time to further deregulate the economy?
You mentioned decentralisation. Does it make
sense to reduce the number of inspections and
reduce regulatory pressure?
I would be happy to hear your opinion on
this issue.
Vladimir Putin: As they say in these
cases, we can choose to reduce the number of
inspections and eliminate excessive state
regulation.
You know that scheduled inspections have
been discontinued not only for small and
medium-sized businesses but also for large
companies. If this was not mentioned yet, I will
say it now – we will extend this through 2023.
As for regulation, our “administrative
guillotine,” as we said, led to the cancellation
of over 1,000 acts, I believe. They were
replaced with fewer than 500 new ones – I hope
they are up-to-date. Over 400 and something new
acts now regulate economic activity.
So, we will continue on this road – of
course, with the exception of production
categories that have certain risks for
consumers. I think everyone understands this.
But we will still try to approach this in a way
that makes these regulatory functions targeted
so as to prevent them from interfering with the
operation of companies and business in general.
You are correct – in response to all the
restrictions that are imposed on Russia and its
economy… you said they expected our economy to
crash. This was not just expected; a goal was
set to crush the Russian economy, but they could
not achieve it. Yes, you are right – our economy
has indeed become much more adaptive and
flexible. It became clear that our businesses
were already mature enough to replace imports
and to take on the activities of the companies
that left, our partners that decided to leave
Russia. Our businesses easily took over and led
the companies that had seemed only recently to
be unable to exist without a Western presence.
This was an easy change in most areas.
Yes, we understand and see the
difficulties in the mid-term. We realize that we
cannot produce everything. But you know, this
morning I talked with several colleagues before
coming here – naturally, I talked with people in
the Government, the Central Bank and the
Executive Office – and our experts still believe
that we have passed the peak of the difficulties
linked with the avalanche of restrictions and
sanctions. Overall, the Russian economy has
adapted to the new conditions.
Much still has to be done to create new
supply chains both in imports and exports and to
reduce the attending losses. However, overall,
the peak of the difficulties is in the past, and
the Russian economy has adapted. We will
continue developing on a more sustainable, more
sovereign platform.
However, in response to all these
challenges, we might and should – and probably
do this in the first place – reduce the red tape
in the regulation of businesses even more and
support them and increase operating freedoms in
their economic activities.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr Prokhanov, we
won’t pass over you.
Alexander Prokhanov: Mr President,
very often foreigners ask us, “What can you,
Russians, offer to the modern world? Where are
your Nobel Prize winners? Where are your great
discoveries, industrial and scientific
achievements?” My colleagues often answer,
“Well, what about the great Russian culture?
Pushkin? Rublev? Russian icons? The marvellous
Russian architecture?” They say, “But this was
all in the past. What about today?”
When I listened to you today, it dawned
on me what Russia can offer to the world: Russia
can offer a religion of justice, because this
religion, this feeling is at the heart of all
Russian culture and Russian self-sacrifice. And
today, Russia is making this sacrifice,
essentially, it is standing up alone to the rest
of the world, the cruel Western world, waging
this fight for justice. This is the huge
contribution that today's Russia is making to
global civilisation and culture. Because even
those old, traditional values that we talked
about, and Rublev, the Russian icon painting
traditions, and again, the delightful Russian
Novgorod-Pskov architecture, and the amazing
Golden and Silver Ages – they all talked about
justice. At the core of Russian civilisation
lies justice.
Maybe we should make the current Russian
ideology a religion of justice?
Vladimir Putin: We have four
traditional religions, I think that’s enough.
Fyodor Lukyanov: We could have a
fifth one.
Vladimir Putin: This was a joke, of
course.
As for making something… You know, I
follow your work, your writing, when I have
time, I enjoy reading what you write and say. Of
course, I know that you are a true Russian
patriot in the kindest, best and broadest sense
of the word.
But I'm not sure we need to offer
anything to anyone deliberately.
You know, you just said that we are
making sacrifices for the sake of other peoples.
I'll argue with you here. We are not sacrificing
anything. We are working to strengthen our
sovereignty, and it is in our own interests.
First of all, strengthening our financial and
economic sovereignty, it will lay the foundation
for our future growth – technological,
educational and scientific growth.
Whether we have Nobel Prize laureates or
not… When did Alferov make his invention? He was
awarded the Nobel Prize for it after 30 years –
or how many? Is that all that matters? The
former President of the United States was
awarded a Nobel prize. Is this an indicator of
real achievement? With all due respect to both
the Nobel Committee and the winner of this
remarkable Nobel Prize, is that the only
indicator?
Science is making strides. We must do our
best to make sure that the returns from the
fundamental and applied sciences for our
development are higher by orders of magnitude,
and we will make it happen. Today, we are seeing
significant and noticeable research staff
revamp, and our science is on track to become
one of the world’s youngest.
Clearly, the United States, with its
competitive edge as a global finance monopolist,
is pumping out like a vacuum cleaner everything
from all over the world, including researchers
and creative people. This, too, will come to an
end when the dollar loses its monopoly as a
global currency, something we see happening
today.
You see, what we are doing appeals to
many countries and peoples. Our Western
“partners” spare no effort to slander Russia, to
humiliate it, or to ignore its interests. When
we fight for our interests and do so openly,
honestly and, let’s face it, courageously, this
fact in itself, this example in itself, is
highly contagious and attractive for billions of
people on the planet.
You can see Russian flags in many African
countries, in some of those countries. The same
is happening in Latin America and Asia. We have
many friends. We do not need to impose anything
on anyone. It is just that many people –
politicians and ordinary citizens – are tired of
living under external dictate. Enough is enough,
people are tired of it. And when they see an
example of our struggle against this dictate,
they take our side internally and externally.
And this support will continue to grow.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, much
has been said about research this time. I think
one of the most interesting panels was about
ways to develop science and technology under
these circumstances.
Ruslan Yunusov is here in the audience.
He presented a very interesting picture.
Ruslan Yunusov: Thank you.
Today, I represent Rosatom and the Valdai
Club.
Mr President, you said the right words
regarding research. We see that support for
science in Russia has grown significantly over
the past 20 years, and the mega-grant programme
has made it possible to launch dozens of modern
laboratories in Russia.
However, on the other hand, as
scientists, we see that most of the professors
who opened these laboratories never came to live
in Russia and work full-time. I can understand
why it is hard to compete. What we have here is
a mega-grant for five years, but then you have
lifetime tenure as a professor. This is really
something to consider.
On the other hand, yesterday during the
panel we talked about our Chinese colleagues who
have made ground-breaking leaps in science over
the past 20 years. Today, they have not just
brought their scientists back, but are taking
top spots in many areas.
Here we are dealing with quanta, and I
want to say that we are aware that the most
powerful quantum computer today is in China, not
the United States, and the largest number of
quantum patents is published by China, not the
United States.
But, on the other hand, we, in Russia
also have programmes that bring many
laboratories together. The quantum project, the
quantum computer project comprises 20 scientific
groups, 15 universities and institutes under the
Academy of Sciences. But we work under five-year
plans.
I think today we have come under
increased pressure as our scientific and
technological sovereignty is facing a challenge.
Maybe this is the right time to start
formulating strategic projects and extend the
planning horizon to 10 or 20 years.
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Yes, I agree with
you – the higher the [planning] horizon the
better, and the further out the [planning]
horizon, the better. We must look at the
positive examples in other countries, as well as
those set by our friends and partners, including
the People’s Republic of China. They have done
quite a lot over the years under the leadership
of President Xi Jinping, who pays much attention
to this – not only to the development of science
but also to the development of China in general
and the Chinese economy, and also to improving
the well-being of the Chinese people. I know
this as we are on very friendly terms with him.
Of course, we can examine and put into practice
whatever helps them achieve tangible results.
As for the mega-grants, they have played
a positive role, indeed, and the next phase we
are carrying out now is not just about research
and establishing separate laboratories, rather
it is the creation of academic communities of
young scientists. This is, essentially, the
future of these mega-grants.
I agree with those who have initiated
this process. We are doing it. (Addressing
Andrei Fursenko.) Are we not, Mr Fursenko?
We will continue doing this.
You said nobody is staying. Some people
come here and work even if they are officially
employed somewhere else, and they spend most of
their time in Russia; there are quite a few
people like this. These are our former
compatriots and not only former ones but our
compatriots who are employed somewhere abroad
but regularly come to Russia to work.
You know, science, like art, hates
artificial borders and restrictions. People must
feel free, and we will not lock anyone up here,
but we will welcome everyone who wants to work
in Russia. In general, we have managed to
succeed in our efforts, and we will continue
moving further along this path.
You must be right in saying that we need
longer term planning horizons. We are now giving
mega-grants for five years, aren’t we? Of
course, we can extend them. These issues depend
on budgetary funding but this can be done. In
any case, today, we are able to extend
[planning] horizons further.
What you said about people who are
working abroad and have lifelong tenure is not
typical – far from it. You yourself are a
scientist and you know that after a contract
that was signed for several years has expired,
they can still tell you goodbye. So, all of this
does not exist for your whole life there either.
But the opportunity to speak your native
language and be in touch with your culture is
for life.
Therefore, both cultural figures and
scientists must be given freedom of choice. We
must create more attractive conditions than what
they are offered abroad. This is not an easy
process. We are going along this path and
achieving results, and we will continue to move
further, including – probably, you are right –
efforts to extend planning horizons.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Please, Mr Wang Wen.
Wang Wen: Thank you. My name is Wang
Wen, I am a professor from the Chongyang
Institute, Renmin University of China.
Actually, this time I have visited more
than 20 cities in Russia, and I wrote a lot of
articles to tell the Chinese people about the
real Russia, because in China, there are a lot
of people that care about Russia and especially
they care about you and your safety. So, my
question is: I know you may feel a lot of
pressure and burden. Do you feel scared, nervous
or anxious, especially under the threat from the
West? Did you create a new Russia or did
Russia’s destiny create you? What do you want to
say to Chinese people and what are your comments
on the past ten years of Russia-China
relationship? What are your predictions and
expectations of the future of Russia-China
relationship? Thank you so much.
Vladimir Putin: You know, in my work
I never think about achieving a historical
accomplishment. Instead, I prioritize doing what
must be done and what we can’t do without. In
that sense, our country’s present circumstances
are shaping all of us, including me.
Speaking about fear, many would love to
hear me say I’m scared, but if I were afraid of
everything, I would do nothing. I can’t allow
myself to be guided by fear in the position I
hold. I must be guided by the interests of the
people of Russia and the state of Russia, which
I am and will be.
I will do what I think is necessary for
the benefit of my people and my country.
As for Russian-Chinese relations, they
have reached an unprecedented level of openness,
mutual trust and effectiveness in recent
decades. China is our country’s biggest trade
and economic partner. We cooperate in all
spheres. In the military area, we have been
conducting regular exercises. In military
technology, we have enjoyed a level of trust
previously unseen in the history of our two
countries. We work together to promote cultural
and humanitarian projects, and naturally in the
economy.
Russia’s highest trade volumes are with
China, and they are growing fast, gathering
momentum even before the sanctions pushed trade
towards Asia, and China.
My friend Mr Xi Jinping and I – he has
called me his friend and I consider him as such,
– we have set a goal to reach specific trade
volume level. We will certainly hit that target
as we are moving towards it faster than planned.
As for our attitude towards China, we
treat China and its people as friends, and we
are deeply respectful of their culture and
traditions. I am confident that we can certainly
move forward with such a firm foundation.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President,
speaking of the fear that Mr Wang mentioned,
when you pointed out the existence of the
nuclear factor this spring, some people were
nervous because they recalled what you said
here, at our annual meeting four years ago. You
said that we would all go to heaven, but we’re
in no hurry to get there, right? (Laughter.)
You’ve stopped to think; that’s
disconcerting.
Vladimir Putin: I did it on purpose
to make you worry a little. Mission
accomplished. (Laughter.)
Fyodor Lukyanov: I see. Thank you.
Mohammed Ihsan, please.
Mohammed Ihsan: I am Professor
Mohammed Ihsan from the Kurdistan region of
Iraq. I am so glad to be here, Mr President,
really.
I have one direct question for you: the
topic of this session is post-hegemonic world
justice and security for everybody. Do you think
at this stage, Kurds in four parts of Kurdistan
are going to have more, better security and more
justice for the future? If you do not mind
elaborating more.
And, as you mentioned, in Central America
and Africa, the Russian flag is everywhere. You
have people who love and support Russia. Be sure
that also in the Middle East, you have a lot of
supporters and a lot of lovers for Russia and
merely for President Putin. Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Thank you for the
final part. There are flags in European
countries and in the United States, too, by the
way, we have many supporters there. By the way,
a large proportion of the US population adhere
to traditional values, and they are with us, we
know this.
As for the Kurds, I have already said,
not in relation to the Kurds, but in general to
all peoples: of course, we must strive for a
balance of interests. Only if a balance of
interests is achieved can peace be sustainable,
including in the case of the Kurdish people.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr Staris, please go
ahead.
Constantin Staris: Thank you.
Good evening.
Constantin Staris, Republic of Moldova. I
represent the parliamentary opposition, of
course, because our government, unfortunately
for our country and our people, continues to
prefer other destinations for their foreign
trips. As a result, today, lights went out in
Chisinau, almost a total blackout. But that's
not what I was going to say.
I have a question, but first, I have a
duty to fulfil. Mr President, you have spoken so
nicely about your family that I cannot pass up
this chance. I have two children, they are eight
and ten, both pupils at the Pushkin Lyceum in
Chisinau. They asked me to say hello to you, and
I could not deny myself this little fatherly
pleasure. So, hello from Alexandra and Gavril
from Chisinau.
Vladimir Putin: Thank you.
Constantin Staris: Now my question.
You said in your address that new models
of interaction between countries and regions
would inevitably emerge. Perhaps, in this
context, it makes sense to return to the idea
that you voiced back in 2001, about a single
economic, humanitarian and cultural space that
would stretch from Vladivostok to Lisbon?
But is this possible in the world we are
about to build, in the post-conflict world, in a
world without a hegemon, a global policeman or a
dominant power?
Vladimir Putin: Is it possible to
create a common humanitarian and economic space
or even a region to ensure security for everyone
who lives on this vast mega-continent from
Lisbon to Vladivostok? Of course it is. Hope
dies last. It is not our idea. True, back then
they said, “to the Urals.” I later changed this
idea from our French colleagues and former
French leaders, extending it “to Vladivostok.”
Why? Because people who live beyond the
Urals are steeped in the same culture, which is
the most important thing.
Complex, difficult and tragic
developments are taking place today. But in
general, why not? Overall, it is quite possible
to imagine such a thing. I think it would take
place one way or another.
I was talking about it in my remarks
about Eurasia as a whole, including the European
part. Do you know what’s really important?
Really important – I want to go back to my
remarks – to have the European part regain its
legal capacity.
How do I talk with a particular partner
if they cannot decide anything without calling
the Washington “regional party committee” every
time to ask for directions?
In fact, this is what is happening in
real life.
I remember one leader arrived during the
onset of challenging events related to Syria. I
had a meeting with him. We agreed on what and
how we would proceed in detail. Very specific: I
will do this, this and this.
From Moscow, he went to Washington. When
he returned to Paris he forgot everything, as if
we had not agreed on anything. How am I supposed
to talk to him? About what?
We arrived at specific agreements, down
to where the fleet would move, what we would do,
and how we would agree on things. We are not
against doing this. We are all for it. And we
reached an agreement, a deal.
How are we supposed to talk with them?
What is the point of talking to them? Better to
call Washington directly and be done with it. I
am not making things up, do you understand?
Of course, Europe is protecting its
interests, especially in the economy, but then
again it is doing so half-heartedly. There go
the gas pipeline explosions. These are not our
pipelines; these are pan-European pipelines.
Five European companies are part of Nord Stream
1. So what? Everyone is keeping quiet, as if it
is business as usual. They even have the nerve
to suggest that Russia blew it up. Russia blew
itself up. Have they lost their senses or what?
No, they keep doing this.
Gazprom published photos from 2016
showing, I think, a US-made explosive device
under the gas pipeline system. They claimed they
lost it during exercises. They lost an explosive
device so conveniently that it slipped right
under the pipeline. I think the purpose of the
device was to destroy underwater mines. Look,
here is the photo.
The international media are keeping
silent about this; no one is broadcasting it; it
all withers on the vine and is nowhere to be
seen: neither online, nor on television. This is
another case of monopolising the media to
promote what they need and to kill everything
that stands in their way. It is right there, but
no one is saying a word about it.
This is why it is, of course, necessary
to create this common space from Lisbon to
Vladivostok in all respects. But this can only
be done with those who have the right to vote. I
don’t want to provoke or offend anyone, but this
is how it is, this is today’s reality.
Nevertheless, I think it’s possible in a
historical perspective.
I mentioned this before but will say it
again. At one time Helmut Kohl told me that the
United States would deal with its own affairs,
including in Latin America, sometime in the
future, that Asia would develop powerfully in
its own way and that if European civilization
wanted to keep going as a global centre, it
should definitely work with Russia. This was
Helmut Kohl’s position. Apparently, the current
leaders of the Federal Republic have different
views, but this is the choice of the European
countries.
However, I would like to return to what
you started with. You said the lights went out
in Chisinau. It is unclear why they went out but
we certainly have nothing to do with it.
Do you know why I am talking about this?
Because Russia is always accused of everything –
somewhere the lights go out, somewhere a toilet
is clogged, sorry to mention it, somewhere
something else breaks – Russia is to blame for
all of it. Do you remember a question from a
well-known movie – What about the chapel of the
12th or some other century? Have we destroyed
this as well? No, thank God, we haven’t. But I
would like to tell you something, and it’s
perfectly true. When we held talks with Moldovan
Government representatives on gas sales, Gazprom
took a very pragmatic, market-based position on
a natural gas contract with Moldova.
Moldovan representatives did not agree
with Gazprom’s position and insisted on pricing
preferences. Gazprom balked and later Mr Miller
contacted me, explained his position and said he
considered it right. I asked him to meet Moldova
halfway, considering the economic and financial
capacity of the Moldovan state. I told him that
these prices were fair from a market point of
view, but Moldova could not afford to pay them.
If they were unable to pay, what was the point?
He did not fully agree with me but heard
what I said. Gazprom met the Moldovan Government
halfway and signed a gas supply contract on
Moldova’s terms, on terms set by the Moldovan
Government.
There were many details in this deal, but
I simply do not want to bore the audience
because probably nobody but you is interested.
The details were related to debt, current
payments and a certain advance payment. Overall,
Gazprom met Moldova halfway in terms of price.
They have to pay, of course. It seems to me that
this is perfectly obvious.
As for why things were brought to the
point of no power in Moldova, I am sorry, but
this is not our problem.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, you
mentioned Europe. There was an interesting
episode two months ago or maybe less, when it
turned out that when you spoke with President
Macron shortly before the special military
operation began, there were journalists in his
office. The call was broadcast over the
speakerphone, and they recorded everything. A
somewhat unusual format. Okay, this is not the
first time. How do you feel about such things?
Vladimir Putin: Negatively. I believe
there are certain formats of communication
between heads of state and they must be
observed, otherwise the partner will lose
credibility. There is nothing wrong with media
representatives becoming familiar with what we
discuss. All you need to do let the other party
know about it, that is all.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Did they?
Vladimir Putin: Of course, not.
During telephone calls, including through secure
communication channels, we always assume that
these are confidential calls that are not
supposed to be made public, or if they are then
the parties should agree on that in advance. If
done unilaterally, this, of course, is not good.
Fyodor Lukyanov: When Mr Macron calls
you, do you ask who is there in the same room
with him?
Vladimir Putin: No.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Why? Maybe you
should.
Vladimir Putin: Because I now assume
that someone is listening.
Fyodor Lukyanov: I see.
We have a guest from Indonesia.
Thank you.
Connie Rahakundini Bakrie: Mr
President, I liked your speech so much. I think
it brings the spirit of building together,
building stronger. Like the tagline for the G20.
I am looking forward to your visit to the G20
next month.
But what I am going to ask you concerns
the title. The event today is titled
Post-Hegemonic World: Justice and Security for
Everyone. I wonder, because in 1955, our
President Sukarno already said that all the
security alliances are dangerous to the world.
Russia is in the Security Council and China is
in the Security Council. Do you think you and
China could file this issue to wipe out NATO,
AUKUS, the QUAD, the Five Power Defence
Arrangements, everything about it, together? Is
that possible?
Number two, your friends in Indonesia are
amazing. Everybody is saying hurrah all the
time. And my second question is, can I have a
picture with you later? Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Yes, with pleasure.
With such a beautiful woman, with pleasure.
We have had very good relations with
Indonesia throughout most of recent history.
When President Widodo calls me, he calls
me brother, and I say the same to him. We value
our relationship with Indonesia.
I am grateful to the leadership and the
President for the invitation to the G20 meeting.
We will think about how we can go about it.
Russia will definitely be represented there at a
high level. Maybe I will go, too. I will think
about it.
With regard to creating new blocs in
Asia, I think, this is an attempt to take the
failed system of bloc thinking from the Atlantic
region to Asia. Without a doubt, this is a bad
idea. Again, this is an attempt to be friends
with someone against someone, in this case,
against China. Not only do we not support an
attempt to revive or recreate what happened in
the Atlantic in the Asia-Pacific region, but we
also believe that this is a very harmful and
dangerous approach.
I must say that this will have adverse
consequences for the participants or allies of
the United States, which, as we know, are seeing
the contracts for the delivery of submarines, or
something else, being taken away from it. It is
just that nothing has been done yet, but the
negative consequences, including for the US
allies, are already there. If this practice
continues, the errors and problems will pile up.
Of course, we have always opposed and continue
to oppose policies like this.
Fyodor Lukyanov: I know that General
Sharma wanted to ask something.
Maj Gen BK Sharma: Mr President, in
the post-hegemonic world, what role do you
expect India to play?
Vladimir Putin: India has come a long
way from a British colony to its current state.
Almost 1.5 billion people, and the noticeable
results of development evoke universal
admiration as well as respect for India from the
whole world.
Much has been done in recent years under
the leadership of Prime Minister Modi. He is
certainly a patriot of his country. And his Make
in India campaign has both economic and moral
significance.
India has been making huge strides in its
development, and it certainly has a great
future. India not only has the right to be proud
of being the largest democracy, in a good sense
of the word, but also of the pace of its growth.
This is an extremely important foundation for
India’s development.
We have a special relationship with India
that emerged or was built on the foundation of a
very close alliance that existed for many
decades. We have never had any issues with
India, I want to emphasise this, never. All we
ever did was support each other. This is what is
happening now, and I am sure it will continue in
the future.
The pace of economic cooperation is
growing today. Overall trade is growing. One
example: Prime Minister Modi asked me to
increase the supply of fertilisers, which is
very important for Indian agriculture, and we
did it. By how much do you think? The supply of
fertilisers to India has increased by 7.6 times
– not just by a fraction, but by 7.6 times.
Bilateral trade in agricultural products has
almost doubled.
We continue to expand ties in
military-technical cooperation. Prime Minister
Modi is one of the few people in the world who
are capable of pursuing an independent foreign
policy in the interests of his people. Despite
any attempts to contain or restrict something,
he’s like an icebreaker, you know, just moving
calmly in the direction that the Indian state
needs.
I think that countries like India do not
only have a great future, but also a growing
role in international affairs.
Fyodor Lukyanov: The subject we
raised, about fertiliser, has instantly brought
Brazil to my mind for some reason. Where’s Igor
Gilov?
Vladimir Putin: By the way, we had
reached an agreement with Brazil that shipments
of fertiliser would increase. Unfortunately,
they’ve gone down a little, a few percent, I
think, maybe due to logistics issues.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr Gilov has left.
Never mind. I think I can ask you a question he
would want to ask.
Brazil is having an election soon. Lula
may be coming back. Do you have a good
relationship with him?
Vladimir Putin: We have a good
relationship with Mr Lula, and we have a good
relationship with Mr Bolsonaro. We don’t
interfere in their domestic politics, that’s
what matters most.
We are aware of a consensus in India on
building a cooperative relationship with Russia
and as part of BRICS, despite the stark domestic
arguments. This is a matter of principle for us,
we proceed from this premise.
We also have a consensus on working with
Brazil. We consider that country one of our most
important partners in Latin America, which it
is, and we will do all we can to promote that
relationship in the future.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, now
that we have mentioned BRICS, Saudi Arabia said
about ten days ago that it wanted to join. Do
you support that?
Vladimir Putin: Yes, we do. All the
BRICS countries need to agree on this for that
to happen. Saudi Arabia is a fast-growing
nation, and not just because it’s a leader in
hydrocarbon production and oil extraction.
It’s because the Crown Prince and the
Saudi government have very big plans to
diversify the economy, which is very important.
They have drawn up national plans to achieve
that. I’m sure that the Crown Prince’s energy
and talent will ensure that these plans come to
fruition.
So of course, Saudi Arabia deserves being
part of large international organisations such
as BRICS or the SCO. Just a short time ago, we
agreed on Saudi Arabia’s status within the SCO.
We will continue to strengthen our relations
both bilaterally and as part of multilateral
associations.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Many in the West are
saying that because of you bin Salman has been
rude to the Americans.
Vladimir Putin: This is not true.
Mohammed bin Salman is young, decisive
and strong-willed. These are obvious facts.
Don’t be rude to him, and you won’t hear harsh
language from him. That’s it. You need to
respect the Crown Prince and Saudi Arabia, and
they will do the same. They will be rude to
those, however, who are rude to them.
As for our involvement, this is just
nonsense. The fact is, that the Crown Prince and
the entire Saudi government are guided by their
own national interests. I know the Crown Prince
quite well personally, and I know what is
driving him – he was thinking of his country’s
interests and of balancing energy markets when
considering whether to cut or boost production.
I am being completely serious when I say
that in this regard his position is absolutely
measured. He aims to balance both the interests
of suppliers and consumers, because in the
energy markets it’s not even the final price
that’s important, it’s the current economic or
political situation. What’s really important for
energy markets is stability and predictability.
The Crown Prince wants to have that and
generally, he gets what he wants.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Meaning, he won’t
let you get a free ride on his back?
Vladimir Putin: That he surely won’t
let you do.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Muhammad Javed,
please.
Muhammad Athar Javed: Thank you very
much, Mr President. I am bringing a lot of
respect and love from Islamabad, Pakistan.
Director General of Pakistan House, Muhammad
Athar Javed.
You see, I really appreciate your
comprehensive and very incisive analysis of the
situation. My question relates to a very
important factor. It also relates to pre-Second
World War, when Jews were demonised and then
later ignored, and everything that was related
to them was ignored by the Western Europe and
the United States. And then the horrible
Holocaust took place.
Now there is a hate syndrome generated
about Russians. You mentioned Donbass, how the
people were being treated. I have witnessed it
myself in the United Kingdom and in Scandinavian
countries. There is a rise of neo-Nazism. And
particularly, I am personally working on a
project to assess the patterns. What we are
realising is that it is very serious. Number
one, it is not being reported, like the previous
instances, in the pre-Second World War. Number
two, it is being like, I would say, washed away
totally. It means that there is a need on the
part of Russia to protect, as you said, the
Russian language issue, with Russians outside
Russia, and also to try to implement
counter-design against the rise of neo-Nazis. It
is a very serious threat. And the last component
of this is: in Ukraine, the recruitment of
non-state actors from across different regions
are being reported, very credible reports, in
order to initiate a full non-state actors’
brigade to fight the conventional army, to
weaken the resolve. I think this needs to be
addressed. I would really like you to give your
analysis. Because this is very serious. Europe
is facing a rise of neo-Nazism. Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: You know, I would
say, one of the most serious and fundamental
problems for those who supposedly care about the
future of Ukraine, the so-called Ukrainian
nationalists, is that the nationalist movement
is merging with the neo-fascist, neo-Nazi
movement.
After all, they rely on those who cannot
be identified as anything but collaborators and
Nazis. Clearly, they are versions of those who,
as I have said, on behalf of the Hitler
authorities, exterminated the Polish, Jewish,
and Russian populations in the regions occupied
during World War II. It is impossible to
separate today's so-called patriots, flag-wavers
and nationalists from Bandera followers – they
are the same thing. That, in my opinion, is
their big problem, really.
Therefore, I keep repeating, including to
our so-called Western partners: look at what is
happening on the streets of Kiev and other major
cities, where thousands of people march with
swastikas and torches, and so on.
Yes, manifestations of neo-Nazism are
also possible in our country. In any country, in
fact, as this is extremely tenacious. But we are
fighting it, while over there, it enjoys support
at the state level – this, of course, is a
problem. It is being hushed up, but it still
exists, and there is no getting away from it,
because it does exist.
But today's flag-wavers in Ukraine are
not even driven by any interests or nationalist
ideas; their motivation is more primitive. They
are driven by economic interests; they want to
keep billions of dollars they stole from the
Ukrainian people in Western banks. They stole
it, hid it in Western banks and will do anything
to protect their capital, anything the West
tells them to do. Only they are putting it in a
nationalist wrapper, presenting it to their own
people as a fight for the interests of the
Ukrainian people. This is what is really
happening – they will fight with Russia to the
last Ukrainian and will not spare anyone.
I say this with regret. Their losses are
one to ten, one to eight. Lately, it's been at
one to seven, one to eight. They aren’t sparing
people at all. Can true patriots of their
country allow this to happen? They are taking
this path without looking back, without thinking
about it or regretting it. Of course, they are
far from protecting their national interests.
But this plague of nationalism is
tenacious, only they prefer not to notice that
it has become linked to neo-Nazism. And this is
certainly a huge problem for the current
Ukrainian regime, and for those who support
them, of course. But we cannot ignore it and
will always point it out, including as one of
the root causes of today's crisis.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr Kim, go ahead,
please.
Kim Heungchong: Hello, I am Kim
Heungchong from South Korea. This is my second
time at the Valdai Club and I have learned a
lot. Thank you very much for providing a chance
to think many things.
I have some questions about security. I
would like to find out your opinion or Russia’s
position on the growing tensions between China
and the United States over Taiwan, and North
Korea’s nuclear missile development.
Another question is about combatting
climate change. Russia is very rich in fossil
natural resources, and so speeding up the
transition to carbon neutrality might contradict
Russia’s interests. What do you think about
that?
Vladimir Putin: I will start with the
last one. A transition to carbon neutrality does
not go against Russia’s interests – we have
opportunities for developing alternative energy
sources, including hydrogen energy and pure
hydrogen, and we have serious competitive
advantages in this respect. In part, it is
possible to use gas. There are many
opportunities, and this does not scare us at all
but, on the contrary, creates an impetus for
development. Primary gas is the best source of
energy as a transitional source of energy. As
for the deep processing of oil, we have
substantial competitive advantages in this
respect, as I just said. This does not run
counter to our interests at all.
What really contradicts our interests is
disorder and confusion in the energy sector,
attempts to rush ahead in settling issues
pertaining to energy security, to ensuring a
green energy transition. How was it possible not
to invest enough money or prevent investment in
the traditional energy sector without preparing
fully for this green energy transition? How
could this happen?
This is largely the reason for the
current energy crisis. After all, Western
politicians just talk to win voters to their
side. First, they scare regular people with
potential climate changes, then they start
exploiting this fear and make unrealistic
promises, and then they receive the votes they
need, come to power and then say “oops”!
What is happening now – a return to coal,
a return to fuel oil? So, what is the result
after all this talk? This is not about Russia.
We are ready to supply gas, and we are ready to
supply oil – why turn them down? After the
explosions on the Nord Stream pipelines we have
one pipe left and it is operating. We can pump
27.5 billion cubic metres but they don’t want
it. What does this have to do with us? If they
don’t want it, so be it.
As for green energy, let me repeat that
everything needs to be prepared for this before
a final transition. Systemic measures limiting
the development of traditional energy sources
have triggered this serious crisis. There is no
funding; banks do not give loans either in
Europe or the United States. Why is everything
limited – banks do not approve loans, do not
insure, do not allocate land. Transport is not
upgraded for oil and gas shipping, and this has
continued for years. Considerable underfunding
in the energy sector has led to shortages. This
is what happened.
The United States is allocating oil from
its strategic reserves – well, this is good, but
they will have to be replenished and the market
analysts understand this. Today, they have
withdrawn oil from strategic reserves and
tomorrow they will have to buy it again. We are
hearing that they will buy when prices go down.
But they are not going down. So what? Wake up!
You will have to buy at high prices because
prices have gone up again. What do we have to do
with this? These blunders in the energy sector
were made by those who have to think about it
and deal with it. This is the first point.
The second point. This is about North
Korea and Taiwan. No doubt, Taiwan is an
inseparable part of the People’s Republic of
China. We have always adhered to this position
and have never changed it.
We in Russia perceive all provocative
gestures linked with US top officials’ visits to
Taiwan as nothing other than a provocation.
Frankly, I do not know why they are doing this.
You know, we have been acquainted with
many of those present here for years and speak
the same language – so let’s have a family talk.
What is happening is a tragedy in Ukraine. The
entire West has attacked us, trying to wreck our
economy. It is supplying billions worth of
weapons and ammunition to Ukraine. This is a
fight against Russia.
But why spoil relations with China at the
same time? Are they sane? It seems that this
runs completely counter to common sense and
logic. Why did this granny have to trudge to
Taiwan in order to provoke China into some
actions? And this is at the same time when they
cannot settle relations with Russia due to what
is happening in Ukraine. This is simply crazy.
It may seem that there is a subtle,
profound plot behind this. But I think there is
nothing there, no subtle thought. It is just
nonsense and arrogance, nothing else. Do you
understand what the matter is? Such irrational
actions are rooted in arrogance and a sense of
impunity.
Our position is clear. I have described
it.
Now about the nuclear problem of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
In my opinion, this problem is also
rooted in – you know what – the reluctance to
talk and an absolutely boorish attitude to North
Korea’s interests, including its security
interests. After all, they practically came to
terms about everything. There was a moment. In
effect, the North Korean leaders virtually
agreed to the US proposals on settling this
problem, including its nuclear component.
But no, at the last moment the Americans
changed their position and actually compelled
the North Korean leaders to renounce the
achieved agreements. In the meantime, the United
States introduced additional sanctions there and
started introducing restrictions in finance and
banking although there was an agreement not to
do this. For what purpose? This is also not very
clear.
Incidentally, we have joint proposals
with the People’s Republic of China on how to
move towards settling this problem. We have
formulated these proposals in two documents and
this is common knowledge. We will adhere to our
coordinated position.
By the way, as regards humanitarian and
similar issues, it is important to understand
the condition of the North Korean economy and
the needs of its people and to settle issues
proceeding from humanitarian considerations
rather than by applying more pressure.
We have very good relations with the
Republic of Korea and we have always had an
opportunity to conduct dialogue with both the
Republic of Korea and the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea. However, we have learned now
that the Republic of Korea has decided to supply
weapons and ammunition to Ukraine. This will be
destroying our relations. How would the Republic
of Korea behave if we resumed cooperation with
North Korea in this area? Would you feel happy
about this?
I would like to draw your attention to
this.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, since
you said that we are having a family talk here,
please unravel a mystery to our family-like
gathering as there have been many speculations
on this topic.
Did you tell President Xi Jinping about
the plan to launch the special military
operation when you met with him in China in
early February?
Vladimir Putin: No, I did not.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Did he say later he
was hurt because you had not taken him into
confidence on that matter?
Vladimir Putin: You know, the Chinese
leader is not the sort of person who talks about
his grievances over whatever it may be. He is a
leader on a global scale in his own right. And
then we do not need it as we, Russia and the
People’s Republic of China, take sovereign
decisions.
So, they in China see well what the
West’s striving to move the NATO infrastructure
closer to our borders means to Russia and they
are assessing this situation objectively. In the
same way they saw what was happening in Donbass
during the past eight years and they are quite
capable of analysing the implications of and the
reasons for the coup in Ukraine in 2014.
Of course, the People’s Republic of China
and the Chinese leadership speak in favour of
pragmatic and balanced solutions that would help
resolve the crisis which Ukraine has plunged
into through peaceful means and we have respect
for this position.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Please, Mr Nelson
Wong, go ahead.
Nelson Wong: Thank you. I am Nelson
Wong from Shanghai, China. It is a real honour,
Mr President.
In your remarks, you mentioned that the
rule-based order that was often used and is
still being used by the West, it comes from
nowhere. Which is actually quite true, and this
has been also discussed quite frequently over
the past four days in our discussions.
So, my question to you, Mr President, is
that looking forward, we are actually moving
into a time without a superpower, which was the
topic of the first day of this year’s
discussion. So, since the US as the only
superpower is losing its control, and we are
moving into a new era, this is not only the
beginning of the end of the US superpower, but
we already are in the process.
So, in a new phase, I believe we also
need to have some rules. So, if we are ever
going to have any rules, what, in your opinion,
Mr President, are the most important? Of course,
it’s not there yet, but for argument’s sake,
what would you think would be the most important
when it comes to setting up a new set of rules?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Why are you saying
there are no such rules? They do exist and they
are written into the UN Charter. These rules are
called international law. We simply need for
everyone to comply with these rules and
interpret them in the same manner. It is only
possible to dismiss or radically update them
when a foundation is prepared for maintaining
relations on other principles.
The UN Charter recorded the alignment of
forces following WWII. Of course, the world has
changed radically since then. Giants like China,
India and Indonesia with large population are
showing economic growth; in Africa large
counties – some of them with a population of 200
million – are emerging and making progress, as
well as countries in Latin America.
The world is changing. Of course,
international law should keep pace with these
changes and regulate relationships between
countries in keeping with the balance of forces
that emerges in the world in reality. However,
this should be done quietly, without haste and
on the basis of clear principles, rather than
rules invented by someone.
I mentioned this in my speech: who has
read these rules? They are talking about rules –
what rules? Where are they written and who has
approved them? It is nonsense. Do they think
they are talking to idiots? To some broad
public, while some of those people do not even
know how to read properly. What are the rules
and who worked on them? It is nothing more than
rubbish. Still, they keep drumming it into
people’s heads indefinitely. And those who do
not observe these rules will be subject to
restrictions and sanctions.
They are waging a trade war against China
and are telling China what to do in its
provinces, how to keep things under control and
what kind of relations should be there, and to
respect human rights. These are the tools,
unfair competition tools that they are using to
take on the People's Republic of China. That is
what it is. They are afraid of China’s growing
power and everything is happening because of
that. They are splitting hairs on human rights
or picking on certain regions of China to
address their economic and political issues. The
point, however, is to oppose China as a rising
competitor, and they are coming up with all
sorts of tools to get there.
The shared basis could include respecting
one another’s interests, openness and general
rules that are consistently understood and
applied by all participants of international
communication. We need to achieve this balance
of interests, restore this balance of interests
and follow these rules. I think it should be
done publicly, not behind closed doors, and not
in the interest of any particular country or a
group of countries, but in the interests of the
entire international community.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President,
without leaving China, I would like to follow up
on the previous question about green energy and
the like. Clearly, Europe will close its energy
market to us in the years to come. There is such
a possibility.
Are we ready to move really quickly and
build infrastructure for the Asian markets?
Vladimir Putin: You know we have been
doing it, and not because of today's situation;
we have been working on it for a long time now.
The Power of Siberia was not built in connection
with the events in Ukraine. We built it because
we were aware that our Chinese friends’ energy
needs are growing, and we can meet them.
We are also holding talks with India and
other countries on a variety of ways to deliver
our energy to the Indian and other markets. We
will continue to liquefy natural gas. We are
still modest participants of the global LNG
markets, but we keep growing. We will continue
down this line. To reiterate, we will keep
expanding this area of business not even because
of the existing restrictions, but because these
are the global economic trends.
In terms of purchasing power parity, the
Chinese economy is bigger than the US economy,
which is a hard cold fact, and its needs are
growing. Why would we not, especially since we
are friends and neighbours and enjoy wonderful
relations and share a border, why would we not
deliver energy there in the same way as we do to
other Asian countries? We have been doing this
so far and will continue to do so.We have, in
fact, agreed upon a new system of delivery
across Mongolia. Both Mongolia and China are
interested. We will provide our friends and
partners with access to our energy resources.
Why not? We did the same thing with the
Europeans and the Americans, but they chose to
leave our market. Godspeed, let them go where
they want. Is it a good or a bad thing for them?
I think ultimately it is a bad thing.
They are leaving and losing. We are open
to cooperation and all comers are welcome, this
process will continue. We have been preparing
for this for many years now, and we will keep
this process running going forward. I do not see
any obstacles here that we would not be able to
overcome, or issues that we would not be able to
resolve. All issues will be resolved.
Alexei Dzermant: Alexei Dzermant,
Minsk, Belarus.
Mr President, before I ask my question, I
would like to convey the words of support coming
from many Belarusians. I often meet with them at
the panels where we discuss Ukraine, among other
topics. The people of my country send a message
of strong support personally to you and to
Russia, which is fighting Nazism in Ukraine.
Here is my question. Since the West is,
in fact, building actual walls and imposing a
blockade, a sanctions pressure on the Republic
of Belarus and Russia, the North-South corridor
has become particularly important as a supply
route and financially. Of course, it is
important to complement it with specific
projects to be implemented jointly by Russia and
Belarus.
Would you agree that with Asia and the
East in general making strides in economic
growth, we need not only to develop the material
infrastructure, but also focus on the cultural
and humanitarian aspects, so that our ideas,
values, and outlook on the world overlap with
the ides and values in the countries of the
East?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: You are right. This
is what we are doing, though. And that is not
because someone is building a wall in the West,
but we have always been doing so.
Look, most Russians live in European
Russia, but Russia’s territory to the east of
the Ural Mountains is larger. Russia is a
Eurasian country; we remember this and we never
forget about it. We have traditionally developed
our relations with Asian countries, and even
more so now, with the surge of growth there
going on for a number of years now.
We see it all, which is why we have
largely reoriented our cooperation to the Asian
countries. Well, of course, developing economic
ties cannot go without paying attention to the
cultural component. To a certain extent, China
and India are the cradles of the world
civilisations, and we approach this with great
respect, attention and interest.
The Russian public’s interest in these
civilisations has always been very high. By the
way, we have schools that study India and China,
as well as their cultures and the people of
these countries, which are multi-ethnic nations
as well. We have always had high-level research
in these areas, and we will support it in the
future.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Colleagues, we have
been working for over three hours now. I think
we have already taken enough of Mr President’s
time. Has anyone got a burning question? There
you are.
Vladmir Putin: Please, go ahead.
Philani Mthembu: Thank you, Chair.
Philani Mthembu from South Africa, the Institute
for Global Dialogue.
Mr President, you said that the West is
not capable of unilaterally governing the whole
of humanity and that we need to build a symphony
of human civilisation. I am interested in just
an expansion of your thoughts. If we are to
build a multi-polar world order, what is the
importance of regional cooperation as a means of
reinforcing and building the blocks of
multipolarity? And then just a few words in
terms of Russia’s engagement with Africa,
particularly, related to the Russia-Africa
summit. Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: We have had very
good, traditionally good relations with Africa
in general, including with the Republic of South
Africa since Africa’s struggle for independence
and against colonialism, as you know. These
absolutely unique relations were forged during
the years when the Soviet Union and Russia
supported African countries in their fight for
freedom.
And this foundation for our relations
that took shape over the past decades must
undoubtedly be used today under the new
conditions to develop multilateral relations
with African states, including with the Republic
of South Africa, which, as you are aware, is a
very active and effective partner of ours within
BRICS.
We appreciate this and we are aware of
South Africa’s capabilities. We are aware of its
capabilities and have confidence in the future
of the African continent, and we will certainly
develop our relations with African countries,
both with those we have had traditional
relations with us over the past decades and
those with whom we are just beginning to develop
them.
Regarding the substance of your question
and its first part. I think I have basically
answered it – I do not think I can elaborate on
my position in a short answer.
We need to find a balance of interests.
This cannot be done under the hegemony or an
attempt to maintain the hegemony of one country
or a group of countries over the rest of
humankind. These hegemons will have to reckon
with these legitimate demands of the vast
majority of participants in international
communication – and not in words, but in deeds.
After all, what is going on? Everyone
pays lip service to equality and support for
African countries and so on. It all sounds nice
verbally but what happens in practice? After
all, today such instruments are used as, let’s
say, the dollar or other currencies such as the
euro. What is happening in reality? In the past
two years, they have printed 5.9 trillion
dollars and 2.9 trillion euros. Where did that
money go? It went into buying goods in the world
markets, and the United States started buying
more food in world markets than it was selling
there; it started buying up food thanks to
having the printing press.
This is what a financial monopoly leads
to – to immediate shortages. In addition to a
poor harvest the previous year and the pandemic,
production was cut, but they printed money to
fight the pandemic and hurled it to their
people, who started buying food and the prices
went up. And who is affected? First of all, the
countries of Africa and partly Latin America and
Asia. Does anyone think about that? Of course,
those who are doing it think about it. But they
do not give a damn about the consequences. They
are pursuing their interests without giving a
thought to the consequences that arise for the
African countries.
And this foundation for our relations
that took shape over the past decades must
undoubtedly be used today under the new
conditions to develop multilateral relations
with African states, including with the Republic
of South Africa, which, as you are aware, is a
very active and effective partner of ours within
BRICS.
We appreciate this and we are aware of
South Africa’s capabilities. We are aware of its
capabilities and have confidence in the future
of the African continent, and we will certainly
develop our relations with African countries,
both with those we have had traditional
relations with us over the past decades and
those with whom we are just beginning to develop
them.
Regarding the substance of your question
and its first part. I think I have basically
answered it – I do not think I can elaborate on
my position in a short answer.
We need to find a balance of interests.
This cannot be done under the hegemony or an
attempt to maintain the hegemony of one country
or a group of countries over the rest of
humankind. These hegemons will have to reckon
with these legitimate demands of the vast
majority of participants in international
communication – and not in words, but in deeds.
After all, what is going on? Everyone
pays lip service to equality and support for
African countries and so on. It all sounds nice
verbally but what happens in practice? After
all, today such instruments are used as, let’s
say, the dollar or other currencies such as the
euro. What is happening in reality? In the past
two years, they have printed 5.9 trillion
dollars and 2.9 trillion euros. Where did that
money go? It went into buying goods in the world
markets, and the United States started buying
more food in world markets than it was selling
there; it started buying up food thanks to
having the printing press.
This is what a financial monopoly leads
to – to immediate shortages. In addition to a
poor harvest the previous year and the pandemic,
production was cut, but they printed money to
fight the pandemic and hurled it to their
people, who started buying food and the prices
went up. And who is affected? First of all, the
countries of Africa and partly Latin America and
Asia. Does anyone think about that? Of course,
those who are doing it think about it. But they
do not give a damn about the consequences. They
are pursuing their interests without giving a
thought to the consequences that arise for the
African countries.
There are similar developments in another
part of the food market: the fertiliser market.
Look here, how is this possible? I have already
spoken about that, and I will reiterate. How can
a decision be made to lift restrictions and bans
on Russian fertilisers in Europe and a follow-up
clarification be issued that these restrictions
are lifted for EU nations only? Have they gone
mad? They published that clarification. Can you
imagine it? Yet they are doing this without any
scruples whatsoever. Is this the way a balance
of interests is observed?
We have repeatedly said that we have
300,000 tonnes of fertilisers under arrest in
European ports. Our companies are ready to give
the fertilisers away for free, but they do not
release them, including to African countries.
Some African leaders asked me where exactly the
fertilisers are. I asked my aides to inform them
of the location and the amounts – 300,000
tonnes, which is worth millions of dollars.
Give them to the poorest countries, they
need it. However, they do not release the
fertilisers. Is this an observance of the
balance of interests? If you want to fight
Russia – go ahead. You do not want us to have
additional revenues – but we are giving them
away for free with no revenues. Give them to the
developing countries, since your actions only
contribute to growing prices. Why are they doing
this? Obviously, this is in their interest.
Is this a balance of interests? How can
we achieve stable relations? We must work to
achieve this balance by acting in compliance
with the standards we call international law.
These standards must be agreed on and complied
with, including in the financial sphere, where
independent systems of international settlements
must be established, as I mentioned earlier.
I gave a specific example of what
incessant and unlimited emission of the basic
currencies is leading to. It also has practical
consequences, including and primarily for
developing countries.
I want to go back to the following: if we
want stability in the world, we must achieve a
balance of interests.
Please, go ahead, I saw someone raised a
hand t.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Nathalia Zaiser,
please.
Dimitris Konstantakopoulos: Mr
President, two small questions.
Vladimir Putin: This certainly does
not look like Nathalia.
Dimitris Konstantakopoulos: Do you
think that the time has come for a deeper
integration on the space of the ex-Soviet Union?
And my second question is: what is your message
to the simple, average citizen of a Western
country if you had in front of you such a
citizen, what would be your message?
Vladimir Putin: First, about
integration.
This is a very subtle issue. Here we must
also seek a balance of interests about which I
spoke as regards the entire world. It is
necessary to do this professionally,
consistently and without rushing. We have
certain plans in the Eurasian Economic Union.
This concerns the removal of restrictions on
major groups of commodities to fully ensure the
free movement of goods, finance, capital and
labour.
I do not think it is expedient to rush
ahead like it happened, say, in the European
Union, when some countries with a certain level
of economic development entered the Eurozone and
did not know what to do with this. It happens
because problems arise when the instrument of
inflation becomes inaccessible for regulating
the economic situation. I am referring to the
well-known situation with Greece and some other
countries as well.
Therefore, we should not rush ahead but
should consistently move towards the
implementation of the plans we have mapped out.
We know what we need to do in this area and we
will do it by all means, taking into account the
interests of all participants in this process.
As for our message to the ordinary
citizens of Western countries – both the United
States and Europe – I would like to voice the
main idea – campaign for higher salaries and
wages – this is the first point. Second, don’t
believe that Russia is your enemy or even
opponent. Russia is your friend and for decades,
we have been doing everything in our power to
strengthen our relations and we intend to do so
in the future.
In this context, I remember a joke that I
recently told my colleagues. An acquaintance of
mine from Germany told me this joke a short
while ago. Here’s a family, and a son asks his
father: “Dad, why is it so cold here?” The
father replies: “Because Russia attacked
Ukraine.” The child asks: “What do we have to do
with it?” Father: “We imposed sanctions on the
Russians.” The son: “What for?” The father: “To
make them feel bad.” The son: “Are we Russians
then?”
I would like to say that all problems –
and I am addressing in this case the people in
the European countries and in the United States
– that all problems that arise in this context
are not linked with Russia’s actions. They are
rooted in the systemic mistakes of your
political leaders, the political leadership of
your countries – in the energy and food sectors
and in monetary policy that led to an
unprecedented growth of inflation and a shortage
of energy resources. Russia has nothing to do
with all this. This is a result of systemic
mistakes by the leaders of your countries. It is
necessary to conduct a realistic analysis of
what is happening and seek changes in economic
policy.
As for international politics, it is
always, of course, a decision of sovereign
states but it should certainly be based on the
opinion of voters, ordinary people in different
countries. But ordinary people should know – and
I will end with what I began – Russia is not the
enemy and has never had any evil intentions as
regards the European countries and the United
States.
And we know that we in Russia have very
many friends there. We will build relations with
the so-called collective West, relying on this
part of the population in the European countries
and the United States.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, and
does your call to fight for higher wages also
apply to Russian citizens?
Vladimir Putin: Yes, it does.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Excellent. Everyone
has heard it.
Vladimir Putin: I must say this is
one of the key issues the Government must deal
with, and trade unions are doing it regardless
of anything, regardless of any special
operations.
A tough dialogue is underway in the
trilateral commission between representatives of
employers, trade unions and the Government. This
dialogue is ongoing.
We see that our citizens’ nominal incomes
are growing yet real incomes have somewhat
decreased. Taking into consideration the
condition of the Russian economy, we can and
must resolve these issues. I hope we will be
able to solve all the issues in this sense and
in this key in accordance with the plans of the
Russian Government.
There is someone there who also wants to
ask a question.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Mr President, don’t
you give orders, I am in command here.
(Laughter.)
Vladimir Putin: It is called
hegemony.
Fyodor Lukyanov: It cannot be helped,
we have not overcome it yet.
Colleagues, I suggest a blitz session at
the end. Nathalia Zaiser is sulking over there,
and there are two more questions, after which we
shall wrap up.
Vladimir Putin: All right.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Nathalia.
Natalia Zaiser: Good evening, Mr
President. Nathalia Zaiser from the African
Business Initiative Union.
I have been engaged in developing
international relations and expanding contacts
in public diplomacy for almost 15 years. As
someone who builds bridges, it is important for
me to project certain actions into the future.
Apparently, we are facing a new
historical stage, and when the current chapter
is finished, there will be a need to establish
new or different institutions of international
partnership. It probably concerns not only
undecided nations but also those countries which
are unable to openly speak out their intentions
and positions due to their geopolitical
situation.
Mr President, what is your vision of a
new international partnership institution? Which
basis of parities is Russia ready to offer at
the international level? Which mechanisms, tools
and personalities are needed to acquire new
allies, partners and friends, not at a
declarative level but at the level of
unquestionable responsibility in terms of
agreements? Do you think we should also change
or build up other approaches within the future
international partnership?
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: Your question, if it
can be called this, is so broad that it rather
amounts to a position.
It seems to me that, in general, I have
already given an answer to what you asked me
about. We must and we can focus on cooperation,
primarily, with countries which have sovereignty
in taking fundamental decisions. This is my
first point.
My second point is that we need to reach
a consensus on each of these decisions.
Third, we need to secure a balance of
interests.
As part of which institutions can we do
this? Of course, these are primarily universal
international organisations, with the United
Nations Organisation being number one.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Please, Alan
Freeman, go ahead.
Alan Freeman: Mr President, I come
from Canada, a NATO country, whose future prime
minister’s grandfather was a Banderista.
We’ve heard the worldwide opposition to
the stance of NATO and the many voices that
exist in the global south. Those voices also
exist in the north; they also exist in the
collective West. Why don’t we hear them? Because
they are suppressed. Just look at what happened
to Julian Assange. The media, the political
elites, the academic elites have mounted an
unprecedented campaign which is racist and
Russophobic, which intimidates people to prevent
them from expressing the full extent of their
disagreement with what their governments are
doing. So, you do not see here the extent of the
opposition that exists in Europe, in Canada, in
the United Kingdom. You do not see it. What can
we do to build relations between those in the
collective West that are fighting what their
governments are trying to do, and the support
that exists in the global south and in Russia
for Russia’s courageous actions and position in
world politics?
Vladimir Putin: It seems to me that
no one has to sacrifice any of one’s national
interests; you just have to stand up for your
national interests and we will work in harmony
with you.
We, of course, are not aware of all the
details of the political struggle in the
countries of the collective West, something you
have mentioned. Perhaps, you know better than I
that we are not involved in activities –
practically at the level of intelligence
services – targeting the opposition, the way the
West is doing in its relations with us and our
opposition. We know that hundreds of millions,
if not billions, of dollars is being allocated
to support the opposition using all means, all
channels, anything they can think of to transfer
funds to Russia for this purpose. We do not have
time to keep tabs on all activities like this.
At the same time, we are not doing anything of
the sort.
We expect – I have talked about this many
times earlier today, even, if I remember right,
in my speech – our position on the fundamental
issues of how international relations and
societies should develop to appeal to a large
number of people not only in the world in
general but also in Western countries.
I just spoke about this. We know that we
have great many supporters. We will rely on
those supporters in building relations with the
countries of the so-called collective West.
I can only wish you every success in your
struggle for your national interests. This will
be enough to maintain good relations with
Russia.
(Addressing Fyodor Lukyanov.)
Still, let me have the last word. Anyone
in the audience can raise their hand and I will
answer your question.
Please, go ahead.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Gabor Stier.
Gabor Stier: Good afternoon, Mr
President.
At the beginning of the talk, you spoke
about the goals and how you had assessed the
situation. My question is the following. Did you
think on February 24 that eight months later the
special military operation will still be going
on? In fact, it is not just going on – the
situation is getting worse. What’s more, many
people in the world are fearing the beginning of
World War III.
Hence my question. One of my favourite
cities in the post-Soviet space is Odessa. What
do you think – I want your advice – if I wanted
to visit it next summer or in two years…
Vladimir Putin: Do not put it off, go
there as soon as possible. It is a joke. I am
kidding.
Gabor Stier: Should I apply for a
Russian or Ukrainian visa two years from now?
Vladimir Putin: You know, Odessa is
indeed one of the most beautiful cities in the
world.
As you know, Odessa was founded by
Catherine the Great, and I think even the
extreme nationalists do not dare to tear down
the monument to the city's founder.
Odessa can be an apple of discord, a
symbol of conflict resolution, and a symbol of
finding some kind of solution to everything that
is happening now. It is not a question of
Russia. We have said many times that we are
ready to negotiate, and I recently mentioned
this publicly once again speaking in the
Kremlin. But the leaders of the Kiev regime have
decided not to continue negotiations with the
Russian Federation. It is true that the final
word belongs to those who implement this policy
in Washington. It is very easy for them to solve
this problem: to send the appropriate signal to
Kiev that they should change their position and
seek a peaceful solution to these problems. And
that will do it.
And as for your possible trip to Odessa,
joking aside, I recommend that you take it. It
really is a very nice, beautiful city with
wonderful traditions and history. It is well
worth the effort to admire it.
True, in recent years, at least at the
time when I was last in Odessa, it did not make
the best impression on me, because obviously the
public utilities were in disarray, it was
visible even on the fronts of the buildings,
although in the centre it seems all right so
far, still well preserved, but should you take a
step outside the centre, everything did not look
so presentable. But still, Odessa is worth
seeing.
Let’s have the final question. Please.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Then Carlos Ron, he
is from Venezuela and we can’t do without it.
Vladimir Putin: Venezuela?
Fyodor Lukyanov: Yes.
Vladimir Putin: I would like the
final question to come from Russians. But it is
all right, go ahead.
Carlos Ron: Mr President, greetings
from Venezuela, from President Nicolas Maduro,
your friend.
You know, right now, about 30 percent of
countries around the world are under some kind
of illegal sanctions from the United States. You
mentioned defending the principles enshrined in
the United Nations Charter. Last month, the
Group of Friends in Defence of the Charter met
in New York, and one of the issues they
addressed was contributing to the creation of a
zone free of illegal sanctions where business
can take place and where we would be free of
those impositions. What do you think Russia can
do to help create this space and how do you
envision this can happen? And maybe you also
have a message for the people of Venezuela.
Thank you.
Vladimir Putin: By countering the
sanctions imposed against it, Russia actually is
creating a certain space of freedom so as to
have no fear of sanctions pressure and freely
develop economic ties between the most diverse
regions of the world and different countries.
No special decisions are needed here. The
very example of the current developments is very
indicative, I think. The colleague has asked
what kind of signals we are ready to send to
citizens of European and Western countries in
general. I spoke about that earlier but I also
mentioned the mistakes in the global economy,
finance, energy and food spheres made by the
Western political leadership.
Here is a confirmation. Sanctions were
imposed on Venezuela, which used to be one of
the biggest oil producers until recently.
Sanctions were also imposed on Iran and Russia.
Now Saudi Arabia is threatened with sanctions.
They want to introduce a price cap on Russian
gas and oil. They are making a mistake at every
step, which leads to tough consequences for
those who impose those sanctions. It is just one
example. And then they start looking for those
who is responsible. They do everything with
their own hands and then look for the guilty
party.
Nevertheless, Venezuela keeps
progressing. It faces big problems, we are aware
of that, but Venezuela is overcoming them.
They imposed these sanctions on Russia
and they expected a total collapse of the
Russian economy. We talked about this at the
beginning of our meeting today. But this
blitzkrieg against the Russian economy did not
happen.
What is going on? Look, inflation will be
around 12 percent this year, and there is a
downward trend. In the first quarter of next
year, our experts say it will be around 5
percent. In the EU countries with developed
economies, it is 17 percent as in the
Netherlands, and in some countries, it runs at
21–23 percent, twice as high as in our country.
Unemployment is 3.8 percent. The
unemployment rate is lower than it was in the
pre-pandemic period: it was 4.7 back then. We
will have a budget deficit of 2 percent next
year, then it will be 1.4 percent, and another
year later, 0.7 percent. It is bigger in almost
all eurozone countries. The public debt is
fundamentally lower than in the eurozone, or in
the United States, or in Britain.
We are going to have a recession this
year, somewhere between 2.8 and 2.9 percent. It
will happen. But industrial production,
manufacturing will remain at about the same
level. Construction: the construction sector is
up by more than 5 percent – 5.1 percent – for
eight months of this year. Agriculture has
doubled, and the trend is increasing.
We have an increase in lending to both
the corporate and consumer sectors. Lending has
gone up. Yes, we have seen some issues related
to the outflow of money from banks due to the
well-known events. The money started coming back
and the people are doing the right thing,
because it is much better to have at least some
interest in the bank than to keep it under the
mattress and lose money due to inflation, it is
quite obvious. The stability of our banking
system is reliable, the stability of the banking
system is high. I repeat, lending is growing.
You asked me: what can Russia do to
create conditions for living independently of
these sanctions and to develop sustainably? It
seems to me that this is not a bad example, and
it is necessary to combine the efforts of all
those who are interested in this, to achieve
this agreement and the balance of interests that
I have already mentioned many times. And then,
without a doubt, we will succeed.
Let's stop here.
Fyodor Lukyanov: Finally.
Mr President, I began by saying that we
were very much looking forward to seeing you. I
think we will leave extremely satisfied, and we
will have much to think about for a long time.
It is hard for me, sitting here, to assess – of
course, impressions may vary, but I think this
is one of our most successful discussions in
terms of both topic coverage and the overall
atmosphere.
Thank you very much, and we are really
looking forward to seeing you next year.
Vladimir Putin: All right.
I want to thank our moderator, our host.
And of course, I want to thank all of you for
the interest you take in relations with Russia,
I mean primarily our foreign guests.
I want to thank all the Valdai Club
experts for your work on this platform and, of
course, for your tangible, substantial
contribution to these brainstorming sessions
that are so necessary, including for the
decision-making process at a practical level.
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