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Putin proposes doctrine of European non-intervention at Moscow forum


Russian President Vladimir Putin laid out his vision for a new European 
approach to conflict resolution at a meeting of ambassadors and permanent 
representatives of the Russian Federation, held at the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs in Moscow from 30 June to 3 July. The address by the president, which 
in accordance with the Constitution defines the country’s foreign policy, 
became the defining event of the forum, whose motto is “The protection of 
national interests and reinforcing the principles of international 
co-operation”.

Putin announced that he has entrusted Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs with 
preparing a complex set of measures to protect Europe from a repeat of the 
Iraqi, Libyan, Syrian, and Ukrainian scenarios, with a particular emphasis on 
preventing attempts to influence internal political processes externally. 

“We need a pan-European insurance framework, so that the Iranian, Libyan, 
Syrian, and Ukrainian precedents do not turn out to be contagious,” Putin 
declared, arguing that the challenge is to write the principle of 
non-intervention into European reality. 

He said that Russia is ready for constructive dialogue with the United States 
of America but this is only possible on a level playing field, whereas what 
Russian authorities were currently hearing were “outright categorical, 
instructional overtones,” besides threats to introduce ever more severe 
sanctions.

This year’s gathering was the seventh such meeting of ambassadors, who convene 
in Moscow once every two years, though for a 16-year period from 1986 to 2002 
the tradition was discontinued.

Putin dedicated a significant portion of his speech at the forum to global 
politics, which is becoming less and less predictable as old conflicts flare up 
again and new conflicts arise. On the subject of Ukraine, he pointed out that 
the emergence of such a hotbed of tension right on Russia’s borders could not 
have been ignored, especially in view of the fact that the fate of Russians 
themselves, their language, history, and culture were seen to have come under 
threat.

“What sort of a reaction did our partners expect from us as the situation in 
Ukraine developed?” Putin asked. He himself responded to this question: “Russia 
did not have the right to leave residents of the Crimea and Sevastopol at the 
mercy of militant nationalists and radicals. 

“She could not allow her access to the waters of the Black Sea to be 
restricted, nor allow NATO to enter Crimea or Sevastopol, so steeped as they 
are in military honor for Russia’s soldiers and sailors, or let the balance of 
power in the Black Sea region to change drastically.”

>From his podium the president warned that Russia would henceforth actively 
>defend the rights of Russians, as well as her compatriots abroad, using all 
>available means - from political and economic to humanitarian operations 
>permitted under international law, as well as the right to self-defense.

In the opinion of Putin, the situation in Ukraine is the culmination of a 
“notorious policy of restraint” that has been exercised by Western nations and 
is the culmination of negative global trends. This being the case, any 
diplomatic attempts by Russia to settle this matter peacefully would have been 
rejected. 

On the eve of his speech, Putin had suggested abandoning the use of military 
force and continuing talks with the insurgents in south-eastern Ukraine in a 
telephone conversation with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and the 
leaders of Germany and France. However, these attempts turned out to be in 
vain, as Poroshenko subsequently gave an order to recommence full-scale 
military action, the implications of which Putin noted.

“Up until now Petro Poroshenko has in any case not been directly involved with 
orders to commence military action. He has now wholly assumed this 
responsibility, this is not only a military but also a political one, which is 
much more important,” Putin said. 

In Putin’s opinion, the conflicts in the Middle East, Africa, and Europe are 
testimony to growing protests against the imposition of a unipolar model of the 
world, in which one country tries to dictate its will. 

He emphasized that, although relations with the West remain very tense, Moscow 
continues to develop trade links with the European Union, first and foremost in 
the field of energy engineering - both in the development of gas infrastructure 
and the South Stream project to deliver natural gas from Russia to Central 
Europe via the bed of the Black Sea.

The president went on to indicate that Russia is looking to pay particular 
attention to co-operation with Asia and Latin America, singling out China.

“We must reinforce our comprehensive partnership and our strategic cooperation 
with the People’s Republic of China at all costs,” Putin indicated. “It could 
be said that strong Sino-Russian diplomatic ties have emerged today in the 
international arena.” 

He stressed that it was very important to understand that the Sino-Russian 
friendship was not directed against anyone. “On the contrary, it represents an 
example of equitable, respectful, and productive cooperation between nations in 
the 21st century,” he said.

As Mikhail Margelov, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the 
Federation Council, who attended the meeting at the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs, said to RBTH, recent events have accelerated Russia’s goal to expand 
her potential for overseas trade with the East. 

 

 
<http://m.rbth.com/international/2014/07/02/ukrainian_crisis_what_denouement_will_play_out_in_the_east_37865.html>
 Ukrainian crisis: What denouement will play out in the east? 

“They have ‘accelerated’ this aim because Putin’s visit to China was planned 
well ahead of the crisis in Ukraine. Russia has been developing plans and case 
studies of one sort or another for economic ties between Russia and the 
Asia-Pacific Region for at least the last ten years,” said Margelov. 

“Russia has entered into the complex network of countries in the Far East and 
South-East Asia and is at last using her unique geopolitical location between 
these global economic centers. This is not a departure from Europe but rather a 
geo-economic decision,” he added.

Concluding his speech, Putin thanked Russian diplomats for their 
professionalism in very difficult circumstances during the Ukrainian crisis. 
Nonetheless, the situation is far from being resolved, and there is still much 
work to be done. 

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