Lavrov Gives LANDMARK Speech: U.S. Foreign Policymakers Betrayed the American Founding Fathers
Lavrov Gives Landmark
Speech: New Centers of Economic Power Will End US 'Global Domination'
Russia's Foreign Minister
paves the way for a consensus-driven world order in a landmark speech in Moscow
"The world is
changing, however, and — who knows — America might yet purify itself and return
to its own forgotten sources."
This is perhaps one of
Sergei Lavrov's finest addresses. It needs to be read in its entirety to fully
appreciate the scale and depth of Lavrov's observations — although
we've provided a very short excerpt for those with short attention spans.
Lavrov's driving
thesis is that the U.S.-led global order has abandoned the concepts of state
sovereignty and international law, choosing political expediency over
consensus.
Lavrov believes that shifting
economic centers will bring this era to an end:
Ironically, the American
elite, which emerged as freedom fighters and separatists anxious to cast off
the yoke of the British crown, had transformed itself and its state by the 20th century
into a power thirsting for global imperialist domination. The world is
changing, however, and – who knows – America might yet purify itself and return
to its own forgotten sources.
[..]
The redistribution of the
global balance of power continues. We are witnessing new centres of economic
power and associated political influence come into being in the world...The
formation of a polycentric international order is an objective process. It is
in our common interest to make it more stable and predictable.
The speech was given to
senior officers of the Military Academy of the General Staff in Moscow on March
23.
We have included a video
of his address at the bottom.
Mr Kuralenko,
Comrade officers,
colleagues, friends,
I am grateful for the
invitation to speak at the Military Academy as part of the Army and Society
series of lectures. The organisers are doing a great job supporting the
tradition of unity of the people and the army, as it should be and has always
been in the best years of Russia’s history. Today, we will focus on Russia's
role in international politics. This theme has always been of interest to our
citizens, patriots, and all the more so to servicemen protecting our state.
How is the role of state
determined in international politics? Just like in other social disciplines,
there are specific fundamental values and criteria in
international relations for making judgments on that.
Geopolitical weight is
among the most important ones. It is clear that a vast country like Russia,
with its wealth of resources and unique geographical location spanning Europe
and Asia, is unlikely to remain on the side, let alone be isolated from
international processes, especially in the modern era when trade, economic,
financial, information, cultural and human relations simply demand that our
planet be united into one truly unified space.
I’m aware that some
entertain the notion, which is eagerly picked up by Russophobes, that Russia’s
vast geography took shape due to expansion resulting from an internal sense of
insecurity. As if the Russians, who for several centuries expanded their
territory, were trying to “push back” a potential aggressor. To this, I can say
that the greatest misfortunes in the past centuries came to Russia almost
always from the West, while Russia, according to Mikhail Lomonosov's famous
dictum, “expanded through Siberia,” bringing different peoples and lands in the
East under its wing. Many centuries of experience of harmonious coexistence of
different ethnicities and religions within one state now allow Russia to
promote a dialogue and form partnerships between cultures, religions and
civilisations, which is also what happens within the UN, the OSCE and other
international and regional organisations.
Another hallmark
associated with our vast Russian territory concerns respect for the state,
which is the guarantor of the country’s unity and the security of its citizens.
A strong state also underpins an independent foreign policy. In international
relations, all of that is embodied in the notion of sovereignty.
The sovereignty of
states, their equality as the main subjects of international relations, was
substantiated and approved within the Westphalian system that took shape in
Europe in the 17th century. Currently, these traditional
notions are being questioned in a number of Western countries. They are trying
to secure for themselves, for example, the ability to interfere in other
people's affairs under the pretext of non-compliance with all sorts of
unilaterally engineered human rights concepts like the so-called “responsibility
to protect.” We are against such a distorted interpretation of the most
important universal international legal norms and principles. Healthy
conservatism with regard to the inviolability of the stabilising foundations of
international law unites Russia with most countries of the world.
Of course, it takes more
than just the size of a country’s territory for it to be considered “big and
strong” in today’s world. There is also the economy, culture, traditions,
public ethics and, of course, the ability to ensure one’s own security and the
security of the citizens under any circumstances. Recently, the term “soft
power” has gained currency. However, this is power as well. In other words, the
power factor in its broad sense is still important in international relations.
Its role has even increased amid aggravated political, social, and economic
contradictions and greater instability in the international political and
economic system. We take full account of this fact in our foreign policy
planning.
Thanks to its advanced
nuclear deterrent capabilities, Russia plays an important stabilising role in
global politics. At the same time, strategic stability for us is not confined
to maintaining the nuclear balance between us and the United States. Given globalisation
processes, the increasing mutual dependence of countries and the development of
technologies, including military technology, we’re taking a broader view of
this concept. In politics, strategic stability is a state of international
relations that ensures strict compliance with international law by all
countries and their associations, respect for the legitimate interests of all
countries and peoples and non-interference in their political affairs. In the
military context, it means consistently bridging the gap between military
capabilities, ensuring a high level of confidence, transparency and
predictability and abstaining from steps which may be perceived as a threat to
the national security of other countries, forcing them to resort to retaliatory
measures. We stand for the strengthening of all aspects of strategic stability
which is the foundation for a lasting peace and reliable, equal and indivisible
security for all.
Recently, there has been
a push towards forcing the nuclear states to abandon their nuclear arsenals and
banning nuclear weapons altogether. It is crystal clear that this is premature.
Let me remind you that it wasn’t for nothing that the parties to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty wrote into it that the nuclear arsenals had to be
fully scrapped but only in the context of general and complete disarmament. We
are prepared to discuss the possibility of further gradual reductions in
nuclear capabilities but only if we take all the factors influencing strategic
stability into account and not just the quantity of strategic offensive
weapons. Another reason why we’re prepared to discuss this issue is the growing
sense of urgency about making this process multilateral. The restrictions on
nuclear capabilities which Russia and the United States have repeatedly
accepted for many years have led them to a situation where, essentially, they
cannot proceed doing this on the bilateral basis.
We take pride in the fact
that there has been a qualitative change in the Russian Armed Forces’
capabilities in recent years. It’s particularly important to note that the
position of Russia today is that force can only be used in strict compliance
with international law and its own laws and commitments – not to conquer, and
not to export political ideas as repeatedly happened in world history and in
our past history, for that matter, but to defend our most vital interests, when
all other means have been exhausted, or to help our allies and friends at their
request, as is happening today in Syria at the invitation of the country’s
legitimate government.
Regretfully, not all
countries in the world are so scrupulous in providing legal grounds for the use
of military force. We have noted cases of loose interpretations of the UN
Charter and of removing any boundaries for designating something a threat to
one’s own security.
The negative trend of
using economic tools of coercion is accelerating in international relations.
These are diverse kinds of unilateral sanctions and restrictions that clash
with the UN Security Council’s positions and prerogatives. As we know, there
are attempts to use these tools on Russia, on the assumption that we are
especially sensitive to this kind of influence.
However, it is
impossible, and will remain impossible to ignore the fact that Russia is among
the largest and most stable economies in the world. It is hard to overestimate
its role in some fields of the global economy, particularly in energy,
including nuclear energy.
Whether some people like
it or not, Russia remains the economic centre of gravity for the post-Soviet
countries. This objective factor, not Moscow’s mythical urge to “revive the
empire”, underlies the movement toward Eurasian integration. We and our
partners in the Eurasian Economic Union are linked in today’s globalised world
by centuries-long economic and cultural contacts and the intertwined destinies
of our nations. We also advance the EAEU’s foreign contacts to implement
President Vladimir Putin’s initiative to form a multilevel integration model in
Eurasia. Interest in this initiative is growing steadily.
Historical traditions
should also be mentioned among the factors that determine a nation’s role in
world politics. “History is the memory of States,” said Henry Kissinger, the
theoretician and practitioner of international relations. By the way, the United
States, whose interests Mr Kissinger has always defended, did not aspire to be
the centre of the liberal world order for a greater part of its own fairly
short history, and did not see that role as its preeminent mission. Its
Founding Fathers wanted its leadership and exceptional nature to derive from
its own positive example. Ironically, the American elite, which emerged as
freedom fighters and separatists anxious to cast off the yoke of the British
crown, had transformed itself and its state by the 20th century
into a power thirsting for global imperialist domination. The world is
changing, however, and – who knows – America might yet purify itself and return
to its own forgotten sources.
Russia has its own
experience with messianic fervour. Its current foreign policy is pragmatic, not
ideological. Our country has its traditions and wholesome values, and we do not
try to impose them on anyone. We warn our partners at the same time that when
they are in Rome they should do as the Romans do.
After many centuries of
trials, our country made it to the forefront of international and European
politics under Peter the Great – his name graces one of the academies whose
students, as I understand it, are here today – and then fully participated in
European affairs during the Vienna Congress of 1814-1815. At that time, with
the direct participation of Alexander I, a system for a balance of power that
existed for many years and mutual recognition of national interests, precluding
domination of any one state, was created in Europe.
The ensuing developments
show us the futility of any efforts to drive our country out of the European or
international arena. Resolving any pressing international issues without Russia
became impossible. We can also see the major damage caused by such efforts to
all the participants in this process. The collapse of the Vienna system (during
which events such as the Crimean War of 1853-1856, the unification and the rise
of Germany, and the final collapse of monarchy in France took place) resulted
in the bloodletting of World War I. After it ended, Soviet Russia was left
outside of the Treaty of Versailles, which largely predetermined its brief
existence. The distrust of Western democracies and the reluctance to interact
with us on an equal footing doomed the attempts to create collective security
in Europe in the 1930s, which resulted in the even greater destruction of World
War II. Only after it was over were the foundations of the international order
laid with our active participation, which remain relevant to this day.
The UN is called on to
play the central coordinating role in the international order. It has proved
that there are no alternatives to it and that it enjoys unique international
legitimacy despite all the shortcomings of this huge “organism” which unites
almost 200 states. Russia supports ensuring the inviolability of the UN
Charter’s key provisions, including those related to consolidating the outcomes
of World War II. We support comprehensive efforts to expand the capacity of this
international organisation to efficiently adapt to new international realities.
In modern Europe, the
roots of many problems can be seen in the irrational and doomed desire to
sideline Russia, the Eurasian power. NATO and EU expansion has reached the
point where Ukraine and other CIS countries were all but presented a false
choice: either you are with Russia, or with Europe. Such an ultimatum was
beyond the capacity of yet inherently unstable Ukrainian statehood. As a
result, a major crisis in the heart of Europe broke out directly on the borders
of Russia and the West. Frankly, the prospects for its settlement and the
implementation of the Minsk agreements have so far been bleak. First, this is
due to the lack of political will and a realistic vision for the future of this
country from the Ukrainian government, and due to its attempts to look for ways
to resolve Ukrainian problems not on the basis of pragmatic interests in the
name of national harmony and prosperity, but at the behest of external sponsors
who have no regard for the aspirations of Russians, Ukrainians and Eastern
Slavs, in general.
We do not see that our
European partners are willing to work honestly in favour of creating a common
security and cooperation space. A fair settlement of the Ukrainian crisis in
line with the Minsk agreements, which we have consistently advocated, could
become part of it. In general, the European Union has been tangibly “losing
itself” recently. In fact, they are serving other people's interests, failing
to find their own unified voice in foreign affairs. We are patient people, and
we will wait for our colleagues to realise that due to a number of reasons –
including historical, geopolitical, economic, and cultural – we, Russia and
Europe, need each other.
The historical,
geopolitical, moral foundations that shape the foreign policy of Russia are
solid and constant. They set the tone of our day-to-day diplomatic efforts
which, in keeping with the Constitution, are guided directly by the President
of the Russian Federation.
The world is really
changing fast. Another “industrial revolution” is unfolding, and a new, more
technologically advanced way of life is taking shape. Uneven development,
a wider gap in the wealth of states and nations, and the battle for resources, access
to markets, and control over transport arteries are exacerbating differences.
Competition is acquiring civilisational dimensions and becoming a rivalry of
values and development models.
In the region of the
Middle East and North Africa, the situation has reached a point beyond which
lies the annihilation of states and of the regional political map. This
widespread chaos has been conducive to an unprecedented increase in the threat
of terrorism embodied by the aggression of the so called Islamic State and
other similar groups. Global terror is a challenge to international security,
and it can only be addressed by establishing a joint international coalition,
acting on a solid legal basis — as Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested
in his speech at the 70th United Nations General Assembly.
The redistribution of the
global balance of power continues. We are witnessing new centres of economic
power and associated political influence come into being in the world. The
Asia-Pacific Region has established itself as the driver of the world economy.
Latin American and African nations, which have considerable human and resource
potential, are taking a more active role. These developments bring into stark
relief the cultural and civilisational diversity of the modern world. The need
to democratise relations between states is becoming a more pressing issue.
The formation of a
polycentric international order is an objective process. It is in our common
interest to make it more stable and predictable. In these conditions, the role
of diplomacy as a tool to coordinate balanced solutions in politics, economics,
finance, the environment, and the innovation and technology sectors has
increased significantly. Simultaneously, the role of the armed forces as the
guarantor of peace has increased too.
It is clear that there
simply isn’t any other way except painstaking daily work to achieve the
compromises necessary to peacefully overcome the numerous problems in the
world. History shows that betting on hegemony and one’s own exceptionalism
leads to greater instability and chaos.
There is an objective,
growing need for Russia-advanced approaches to key modern issues that are free
of ideology and rooted in the principles of multilateralism and respect for
international law. More and more countries are coming to share these
approaches, which strengthens Russia’s authority and its role as a balancing
factor in world politics.
We do not favour
confrontation or isolationism. Guided by the Foreign Policy Concept approved by
President Vladimir Putin, we will continue to advance a positive agenda in our
relations with our partners and neighbours, including the United States and the
European Union.
Under the current
circumstances, there is no alternative to an independent, pragmatic and
multi-vector foreign policy based on the consistent defence of national
interests along with the simultaneous development of equal cooperation with all
who are interested in reciprocating. All our actions are aimed at protecting
our sovereignty and creating conditions for the peaceful and sustainable
development of Russia and the Russians.
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