This interview with
the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was conducted by ITAR-TASS on
September 10, 2014:
* * *
Question: Will you agree that you’ve had a really hot time
for the past six months?
S.V.Lavrov: And it’s not all over yet. Generally speaking,
there has been no calm in foreign politics for a long time.
Question: Don’t you get despaired once in a while?
S.V.Lavrov: Why? What for?
Question: Ok. Imagine you’ve met with a foreign counterpart,
you’ve struck a deal, and then it suddenly turns out that the guy got it all
wrong or decides to backtrack…
S.V.Lavrov: No, never ever. That’s not the type of feeling I
may have deep down in my heart. We cannot afford to get desperate. We must keep
doing our job right.
Question: But sometimes one cannot but reach the boiling
point.
S.V.Lavrov: That’s no good, either. The two things go hand
in hand. Only a novice, who suddenly thinks he has reached the dead end, can be
forgiven for losing self-control and for not knowing what to do next. Yours
truly has had a chance to see a lot over the decades in the diplomatic service,
thank God. Any person needs patience, and in our profession this quality has a
double value. Making me jump out of my skin is a hopeless task. But it’s not
worth trying, though.
Question: Can you mention some really tough guys you’ve
chanced to have in front of you across the negotiating table?
S.V.Lavrov: Come on, how do you think I must go about this
business? I may name some, but all the others will get insulted… All were real
professionals!
Question: Not all, I reckon…
S.V.Lavrov: Why not all? Of course, all. But each of them
has certain professional strengths. Some are quite professional when it comes
to grandstand play, to blocking everything, to shirking the search for a
compromise and to avoiding direct answers. People of this sort address some
very different tasks. And nearly all of them lack an independent foreign
policy. There are only strict instructions from this or that high office that
have to be followed. And they scrupulously toe the line.
Naturally, you always expect your partners to be consistent
in their actions, to observe common standards. After all, the United States and
the European Union have been demanding all the way that all countries should
stick to the principles of democracy and the rule of law in their home affairs.
But as soon as we get to the international level, none of them ever mentions
these basic values any more. That’s natural, of course. A democratic world
order does not fit in with the policies the Western world is pursuing these
days in its bid to retain its centuries-old foothold. But this is an ever
trickier task. In other words, the international system is in commotion, its
basics are being shaken loose and rather strongly…
Question: With our help?
S.V.Lavrov: The other way round. Russia has been
consistently pressing for the consolidation of international law. We have urged
compliance with the achieved agreements and creation of new instruments
facilitating proper response to the modern challenges. Take, for instance, our
proposal for codifying the principle of indivisibility of security in Europe
and making this principle legally binding for all. This political declaration
of ours was aimed at preventing crises like the one in Ukraine. Our proposals
fell on deaf ears. We were told that an extra treaty was utterly unnecessary.
In other words, everybody was saying that security in Europe was inseparable,
of course, and that in terms of international law NATO would provide proper
protection for all of its members. But it does not guarantee the security of
all those unaffiliated with it! Possibly, the original plan was to use this
pretext for pulling all post-Soviet countries into the alliance and thus
bringing the division lines closer to our borders. But the idea proved an
abortive one.
Question: Really?
S.V.Lavrov: Experience has shown that this a vicious logic
and it leads to a dead end. Ukraine has demonstrated this to the full extent.
To make NATO and CSTO countries and all neutral countries not affiliated with
any political and military alliance (let me remind you that Ukraine had
proclaimed its non-aligned status, just like Moldova) feel comfortable and
secure, a dialogue should have been started precisely the way we had proposed
long ago. Then there would have been nothing like today's tug-of-war situation,
in which Brussels told Ukraine to choose between the West and Russia. Everybody
knows the root causes of the crisis: we were not being listened to, Kiev was
forced into signing arrangements with the European Union, which had been drafted
behind the scene and, as it eventually turned out, were undermining Ukraine's
obligations on the CIS free trade area. When Viktor Yanukovich took a pause for
a closer look at the situation, the Maidan protests were staged. Then there
followed the burning tires, the first casualties and an escalation of the
conflict…
Question: One of our satiric writers, Mikhail Zadornov, at a
certain point dropped this sad remark: America is prepared to fight a war with
Russia to the last Ukrainian.
S.V.Lavrov: What can be said in a situation like this?
Cynicism has been part and parcel of politics all along. Possibly, it is
inherent in all those who write and speak about politics. We would hate to see
Ukraine being used as a pawn. Alas, it has been otherwise so far – not through
our fault and contrary to Russia's wish. Some partners in the West – not all of
them – have been trying to use the deep crisis of Ukrainian statehood for the
purpose of "containing" Russia, for isolating us, and thereby
tightening their looser grip on the international system. The world is
changing, the share of the United States and Europe in the global GDP is
shrinking, there have emerged new centers of economic growth and financial
power, whose political influence has been soaring accordingly. There will be no
stopping this trend. True, it can be resisted, and such attempts are being
made, but it is really hard to go against the stream. This is the cause of many
crises.
Question: History will put everything in its proper place,
but for now the West tends to blame current tensions on Russia. It argues that
we started it all. In Crimea.
S.V.Lavrov: Our country prevented bloodshed there. It
prevented a rerun of the Maidan type of protests and war, which later erupted
in the South-East. As you may remember, when the confrontation in Kiev reached
the boiling point, the conflicting parties concluded the February 21 agreement.
On the list of its priorities was the prompt creation of a government of
national unity, to be followed by a constitutional reform and general elections
by the end of 2014. The document carried the signatures of Yanukovich, and also
Yatsenyuk, Klitschko, and Tyagnibok, who then represented the then opposition
and now making up the ruling coalition. The foreign ministers of Germany,
France and Poland acted as witnesses of that agreement.
Question: Not Russia, I must remark.
S.V.Lavrov: We addressed the issue at a Security Council
meeting only to make a decision that our signature would be unnecessary,
because the moment the then Ukrainian president, Viktor Yanukovich, agreed to
that document, he in fact made colossal concessions tantamount to the
authorities' capitulation. But the opposition thought the gained advantage was
not enough and after the attacks on the presidential residence and other
government offices in Kiev it was declared on February 22 that there would be
no government of national unity and the "government of winners" would
be created instead, allegedly saying Yanukovich had fled and claiming the
power. We were asking our Western colleagues how is that? Haven't you signed
the document that was expected to restore calm? In reply we heard that
Yanukovich is out of Kiev, thus the agreement is no longer valid. What a
remarkable piece of logic! Firstly, at that moment he was in the east of
Ukraine, in his country. Secondly, it has turned out that the task of national
reconciliation was linked entirely with the personality of Yanukovich and his
ousting, hasn't it? Is this what the European values are all about? There has been
no answer to this day. Today the West is acting in concert – with the United
States and Britain demonstrating particular zeal – to unilaterally support the
current regime in Kiev. They are claiming that peace in Ukraine will be
possible only when those whom they call separatists and terrorists in the
southeast have been suppressed.
Crimea would have flared up, too. I am convinced about that.
There were registered attempts at riot damage, just the way it happened during
Maidan unrest. Right Sector militants tried to get into the peninsula. There
were some instigators inside the Republic.
Question: At that point the “polite people” appeared in the
limelight.
S.V.Lavrov: They have always been there. The Russian Navy
has its facilities not in Sevastopol alone. Our troops had the right to move
among them. It all happened in strict compliance with the effective agreement
with Ukraine. True, at some point Russia increased its military presence in
Crimea, but let me say once again - we did not exceed the quota the
Russian-Ukrainian treaty on the naval base allowed for.
Question: Incidentally, T-shirts with a "polite
people" print are much in vogue these days. Do you have one?
S.V.Lavrov: I have received a few as a gift. I particularly
like the khaki-colored one with a picture of three guys wearing masks and
glasses. A really nice piece of art it is. I think it is a good sign that some
people can address fundamental political problems with a pinch of humor…
Although opinions may differ.
We are told we have committed an act of annexation. We
reply: Crimea saw a referendum and it could not be staged. A lot of
journalists, including foreign ones, who were doing their job in the peninsula
at that moment acknowledged this. True, a group of people, in particular, some
members of the Crimean Tatars’ Mejlis are unhappy about Crimea’s reunification
with Russia. But now the Crimean Tatars enjoy something they could’ve never
dreamed of as part of Ukraine – status of their language and land amnesty.
Everything that has fuelled tensions in relations between the Crimean Tatars
and the rest of the peninsula’s population is being eliminated. In response to
reproaches from our western partners we tell them that in Kosovo their policy
was quite different. There was no referendum, as well as there had been no
crisis before part of Serbia was declared independent. There were no threats to
Kosovo’s people. On the contrary, Belgrade and Pristina were engaged in
negotiations and were slowly but surely moving on. Then the Western countries
arbitrarily picked the date and set artificial deadline for achieving an
agreement while Kosovo’s Albanians played to that very skillfully. After that
Europe and the United States hypocritically made a helpless gesture: once you
have failed to come to an agreement by the established deadline, we are
recognizing Kosovo unilaterally. Period. When we started asking "How
come?" we were told that too much blood had been shed in Kosovo. By the
same logic we should have waited, first, for a blood bath to happen in Crimea
in order that the United States and Brussels condescendingly allowed the
surviving Crimeans to determine their own future.
Question: But Donetsk and Lugansk held their referendums,
too. I think those who were casting their ballots believed that the very same
"polite people" wearing khaki-colored uniforms would appear in
Donbass soon. Instead, local civilians saw bombs raining down on them…
S.V.Lavrov: I believe that Crimea was a very special case, a
unique case from all points of view. Historically, geopolitically, and
patriotically, if you wish. The situation in the southeast of Ukraine is
different. There is nothing like the unity we saw in Crimea. Some would like
their land to re-emerge as a new territorial entity called Novorossia, while
others wish to stay in Ukraine but enjoy greater rights. As a matter of fact,
we recognized the results of the referendums and called for their
implementation through a dialogue among Donetsk, Lugansk and the central
authorities in Kiev. Sadly, that arrangement has never been implemented. The
use of snipers in Kiev’s Independence Square, the investigation into the
violence in Odessa and Mariupol and the circumstances of the Malaysian airliner
disaster are being hushed up. This silence makes one suspect that Kiev and its
sponsors have a great deal to hide. These are the links of one and the same
chain. Continued lies and total inability to negotiate are really dismaying. I
feel that some of our Western partners are not quite comfortable, but they have
nevertheless opted for a policy of catering to the ambitions of the "party
of war" in Kiev. The Europeans are increasingly aware of the fact that
they are involved in a geo-strategic project of the United States. To the
detriment of the fundamental interests of the Old World. I do hope that the
singing of the Minsk protocol of September 5 in the follow-up to the peace
initiatives of the Russian and Ukrainian presidents will change the situation
and that the agreements between Pyotr Poroshenko and the heads of the Donetsk
and Lugansk People’s Republics will be implemented without any attempts to
disrupt the process.
Question: Do you believe there is such a chance?
S.V.Lavrov: I most certainly do. Now it has to be used to a
full extent. A national dialogue with the South-East was launched after many
months of refusal and common sense seems to be gaining the upper hand. Clearly,
it was hard to expect one-hundred-percent ceasefire from the very first hours
and it took time for those who were confronting each other arms in hand to get
the messages, so sporadic incidents were quite expectable. It is important that
they did not amplify and did not lead to new hostilities. We support the
proposal from the DPR and LPR leaders for prompt deployment of OSCE monitors in
the areas of the conflicting parties' engagement. This item was included in the
Minsk agreements of September 5 and now it is acquiring key importance.
Question: But many in Ukraine have long claimed it is not
just struggle with separatists, but a war with Russia. What is to be done about
that?
S.V.Lavrov: Kiev is interpreting the events in this way
because the United States wants it. The voters are offered very simple election
slogans and nobody takes the trouble of analyzing the situation. They keep
sticking political labels –"stupid blokes," "separatists".
They keep saying that everything in Donbass would have been calm and bright but
for Russia, which should pull out its regular troops and armaments… What
troops? Where from?
Question: But people carrying Russian passports and firearms
are certainly present there.
S.V.Lavrov: And also people with Swedish, Polish and
Lithuanian passports… There are even some black fellas. With their unmistakable
US accent. I would not claim they are instructors or mercenaries. Trouble spots
always attract volunteers, risk-takers and all sorts of adventure seekers. But
we are not discussing them at the moment. A full-scale war is underway in
Donbass. I have read quite an interesting interview with General Ruban in the
Ukrainian press, he said outright: in Donetsk and Lugansk the Kiev authorities
are fighting a war with their own people.
Question: Vladimir Ruban is a negotiator, he is arranging
the exchange of prisoners of war.
S.V.Lavrov: You have hit the nail on the head. General Ruban
knows the situation from the inside and he is doing a very specific job – he
saves people's lives and he sees his goal in putting an end to the war. The
officials in Kiev stubbornly refuse to realize that they will have to negotiate
not with us but with their own citizens, including the residents of the
South-East. The Poroshenko peace plan had been proposed as the sole alternative
until just recently. We welcomed it because it called for armistice and from
that standpoint played a positive role. But, firstly, the armistice was
declared for a very short time and, secondly, the following condition was put
forward: the one who has not gone in hiding is welcome to face the music.
Either the militias use these few days to lay down arms, and the Kiev
authorities will then possibly decide to grant amnesty to some of them, if they
find out those who have surrendered are not responsible for any serious crimes
against the regime, or everybody is exterminated. That's the whole peace plan.
Then we shall give thought to how to restore Donbass. The European Union said
in its latest documents regarding Ukraine that it was calling upon everyone to
act according to the Poroshenko peace plan. We asked more than once: how about
the Geneva accords reflecting the four-party consensus? We were informed that
it was supported as well but there was no need to state the obvious. That is
the sort of child talk we heard in response… Only now, with Vladimir Putin's
seven-point peace initiative it has become possible to embark on the
negotiating track in Minsk and to adopt the September 5 protocol. The Russian
president urged both parties to terminate offensive operations in Donbass, pull
out the Ukrainian forces to a distance large enough to rule out the risk of
shelling of villages and cities, arrange for an all-for-all exchange of
prisoners of war, open humanitarian corridors and dispatch repair teams to
restore infrastructures and arrange for international monitoring of the
observance of ceasefire…
Question: You have read Ruban's interview, so you must have
heard about the row over Andrei Makarevich's concert in Svyatogorsk...
S.V.Lavrov: That's a matter of his own conscience. On the
one hand, sports and art must stay out of politics and cultural workers'
mission is to restore and strengthen bonds between peoples in times of trouble.
On the other hand, artists, actors, singers and musicians are all citizens.
Each of them has one's own position and any person is free to speak one's mind
aloud. When several hundred Russian cultural workers expressed their attitude
to Crimea and the situation in the southeast of Ukraine, some of them were
denied entry to a number of European Union countries.
Question: That is what Latvia did with Kobzon, Gazmanov and
Valeria.
S.V.Lavrov: That is sad. The national identity is heavily
distorted. I recall how the European Union and NATO expanded about ten years
ago: not only the East European countries that had once been members of the
Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON) and the Warsaw Treaty
Organization, but also the three Baltic republics were hastily made their
members. I would leave the European Union aside – that is about economy. If
there is no prejudice to the fulfillment of obligations to other states and
organizations, who may be against it? As for NATO, we are deeply convinced that
the alliance has lost the meaning of its existence and is feverishly looking
for a new one. After Afghanistan it became clear that this theme no longer
consolidates the alliance, so Brussels happily jumped at the opportunity to
play the Russian card and to portray us as a threat. Now this idea is being fuelled,
including at the latest NATO summit in Newport.
We have repeatedly asked our Western colleagues: is it
necessary to expand NATO, probably it would be better to bear in mind the OSCE,
the equal and indivisible security for all? We were told: you see, the Baltic
countries have some phobias after being part of the USSR, they longed for
independence, finally they got it, but they are still afraid of you. When we
have them in NATO, they will calm down and your relations will become cloudless
at once. So what do we have? Ten years have passed, the umbrella of the
alliance has been opened over the Baltics, but have they rid themselves of
those phantom fears? On the contrary! For instance, with regard to many
fundamental issues of pan-European cooperation, Lithuania is even getting ahead
of the US. And now the Baltic countries together with Poland are asking NATO to
target its missile defense system at Russia! Who in his right mind can today
seriously talk about our invasion of Europe? That is ruled out!
Question: But some do talk about it. Now because of us
Ukraine has a similar phobia. In that country, there has never been a mass
attitude to all Russians as enemies, and now there is.
S.V.Lavrov: Not because of us. Rather, there are attempts to
make us look like that. You know, when the broadcasts, the Internet and the
printed media are filled with anti-Russian propaganda, a mostly rude, false and
shameless one, it is hard to expect a different outcome. Our television
channels in Ukraine are blocked, all information is presented in a partial,
biased fashion. But this does not mean that everybody has been brainwashed. I
talk to Ukrainians, I have met with refugees from Lugansk and Donetsk and I
have first-hand knowledge that there are honest politicians in Kiev who are
interested in bringing an end to this hysteria.
I believe that attempts to drive a wedge between our peoples
will fail, although by and large this is the chief aim. Somebody is very
reluctant to see the restoration of historical brotherhood of Russians and
Ukrainians. Mistakes have probably been committed by both sides, but we, at
least, are trying to be honest, we do not resort to outright lies and we do not
use double standards.
I would also like to talk about the Middle East. When the
Arab Spring began, we proposed to our colleagues in the United States and
Europe to get together and analyze in the most serious way what was going on,
to contact the League of Arab States and to establish a multilateral process
that would allow us to exchange assessments and develop a common course. That
did not work well enough. Let us recall Egypt, where President Mubarak, who had
been safeguarding the interests of the United States in the Middle East for 30
years, after he abdicated, was put in a cage and, barely alive, was being
brought to the courtroom again and again. Nobody even took the trouble to
explain to those who came to power in Cairo that they should act differently,
in a civilized way, if they wish to preserve and strengthen their country. Then
there was Libya – one of the most socially prosperous states of the region.
True, it had an authoritarian regime, some called it dictatorial, but what do
we have today? The country does not exist anymore. It is split into semi-feudal
principalities run by terrorists. And the West does not know what to do.
My French colleague publicly acknowledged that during
Gaddafi’s rule Paris had been supplying weapons to the opposition in defiance
of the UN Security Council’s resolution prohibiting it. Then these people moved
to Mali, and the French had to send an armed contingent there to fight them. I
asked my colleague whether he found such behaviour strange. He laughed and
replied: "C’est la vie". If this is some kind of politics, I do not
like it.
In Syria, the drama is not over yet. In this case, we also
persistently called upon the Americans and the Europeans to address this issue
before the problem spilled over to the neighbouring countries. It should have
been stated clearly: the world community supports the legitimate Syrian
government in its struggle with the militants, there is no place for them in
the existing system. In reply we heard: do not exaggerate. Soon the group
calling itself the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant appeared. Russia’s
attempts to declare it a terrorist one and to include it in the respective
lists of the UN were met with US objections. Only when this organization
captured a third of Iraq and a US citizen was publicly executed, B.Obama
recognized: yes, they are terrorists. Today the Americans are bombing them on
the Iraqi territory, but they do nothing with them in Syria, because there,
they are fighting against B.Assad, whom the United States wants to overthrow.
That is the logic of double standards: terrorists can be good if they bring
grist to the proper geopolitical mill.
Question: Some diplomats are rumored to be joking that
Bashar Assad bows and prays to Allah to thank him for the Maidan protests.
S.V.Lavrov: Do you mean that the events in Ukraine
distracted attention from Damascus? This irony may be true in a way, although
we are certain that forgetting about the need to end hostilities in Syria would
be wrong. Once absolutely uncompromising, Washington and its European allies
have now been drifting closer to our approach. A year ago some of my Western
counterparts suddenly started saying that the risk of terrorists seizing Syria
and turning it into a training camp for militants is far more serious than
Assad remaining in power.
Question: What would you tell those who claim that the
effects of the Ukrainian factor on the world politics are blown out of
proportion? There is Islamic terrorism in the Middle East, the Ebola virus
disease in Africa and the old-time non-stop crisis in the Gaza Strip…
S.V.Lavrov: The Ukrainian issue for us is certainly the most
important one. For everybody else the issue looks somewhat exaggerated simply
because the United States is regarding Ukraine as a scene for a geopolitical
clash where the future of the world is at stake. Will the US-led Western world
be able to retain its dominating position, or will it have to negotiate with
other centers of power? I asked John Kerry and European foreign ministers why
the West advocated for an early ceasefire and national accord practically in
all conflicts – those in Sudan, Yemen, Afghanistan, and Palestine – but not in
Ukraine. Only the Poroshenko peace plan and no other option. It turns out that
it is possible to negotiate with Taliban and the Islamic Jihad, and utterly
impossible to have contacts with those who have been dubbed as DPR and LPR
separatists. Why were the people of South-Eastern Ukraine denied the right to
be heard? That is beyond good and evil! Just as the fact that the first
humanitarian convoy from Russia was unable to reach Lugansk for two weeks,
although the city had long experienced problems with water and electricity
supply and a shortage of many essentials. Kiev was procrastinating in all
possible ways without giving any chance to extend a helping hand to those in
dire need for it. Apparently, it was aware that otherwise it would be rather
hard to present our country as an aggressor. Back last May we proposed the
Ukrainian Foreign Ministry to provide humanitarian assistance to the
South-East. Our proposal was denied. The issue was discussed again last July,
and we received consent in principle. It was then followed by a long and boring
discussion of the details. First Kiev proposed one route, then changed it for
another. Those were not negotiations but an endless ping-pong game.
This tug of war lasted for more than two weeks. Finally, we
lost patience and on August 22, after our official notification of the
Ukrainian side and the International Red Cross, the convoy entered the Lugansk
Region. Waiting on and on was no longer possible, for it would look like a
mockery of common sense. Instantly, there was a shower of lies about Russia’s
craftiness. There was an impression that it was a deliberate provocation aimed
at luring us into a conflict.
Question: According to you, Sergey Viktorovich, there are no
calm times in diplomacy, you are the second long-liver in the government after
Sergey Shoigu, and you have great experience. It is enough to bring to mind the
year 2008, a war with Georgia and your striking remark ‘fucking lunatic’
intended for Mikhail Saakashvili…
S.V.Lavrov: It was not me who said this. The story is as
follows. In the wake of events in South Ossetia, my European counterpart
visited Tbilisi, and on the way back asked to be received in Moscow. In a
private conversation, he told me about his talks with Mikhail Saakashvili, that
had made his hair stand on end, and used that very expression. And then I
repeated it to former British foreign secretary David Miliband, who once phoned
me to censure Russia for allegedly offending peaceful Georgia and its president.
I did not add any insulting word about Saakashvili for myself. But some three
months later, Miliband’s advisers leaked the episode to mass media for some
reason, besides strongly distorting it.
Question: Nevertheless then there was ‘reset’ of relations
with America, relations with the West were sorted out, and now, when
“Crimea-is-ours” one can only dream about this…
S.V.Lavrov: If it was not for Crimea and South-Eastern
Ukraine, the West would have invented something else. The goal was set to unbalance
Russia at any price. The task was formulated long ago. Take Syria, for example.
A couple of years ago they turned against us accusing us of protecting the
dictator tyrannizing his own people. By the way, it was said then that Assad
was using famine as arms. Revisiting the current humanitarian disaster in
Donbass – maybe the idea was to starve everybody there to death and then
populate the free territories anew with true Ukrainians?
Question: You will agree that back last winter, everything
looked quite nice for Russia: a successful APEC summit in Vladivostok,
triumphant Olympic Games in Sochi, G8 presidency, but then….
S.V.Lavrov: Let me repeat: when there is a will there is a
way. It was not yesterday that Washington and some European countries decided
to isolate Russia.
Question: And as a result we are now engaged in a war of
sanctions.
S.V.Lavrov: Russia retaliates. It is the very case when
others were the first to begin it. Much is being written now about whether we
should have done it or not. You know, when you are punished like a guilty
school student… Russia cannot remain indifferent in this situation. But
whatever the attitude to the ban on food imports from the European Union,
Norway, North America and Australia could be, and I have heard different
assessments, I don’t think this is a tragedy. Everything is solvable. It is
important at this point to be prompt: when supplies from one country end, an
adequate replacement will be needed from another importer or a Russian
producer. I believe nobody will argue that fruit and vegetables from
Azerbaijan, Armenia and Central Asian republics are tastier and have a quality
better than those arriving from Europe. At least I like them more.
Question: And will the victory over certain select
McDonald’s restaurants bring closer Russia’s geopolitical triumph? Right before
the start of mass checks into McDonald’s outlets across Russia, the company
placed on air a TV spot advertising a new burger with sanctioned parmesan…
S.V.Lavrov: I have long stopped going there. However, I went
to the very first McDoland’s restaurant that opened on Pushkin Square in 1990
with my daughter. Deputy Prime Minister Dvorkovich has already said that nobody
is planning to ban this fast food chain. Necessary checks will be made, sanitary
norms will be brought back in order… As for parmesan, any kind of cheese can be
produced if one invests effort and knowledge. This is not a problem.
Question: The main thing is not to bring the situation to
idiotism.
S.V.Lavrov: Right, but one does not want to look an idiot
either. Rosselkhozbank, extending credits to our agricultural producers, is
among those targeted by the sanctions. This means that domestic farmers will
face difficulties with financing, and their products will be less competitive
as compared with imports from the European Union, which gets you know how many
billions in subsidies. We can only dream about such subsidies. And there is one
more moment. The countries that imposed sanctions, and these are mostly NATO
member countries, are increasingly often maintaining that Russia is not their
partner any longer, but an adversary. And we must realize how to treat these
statements. How much sense does it make that food security of a state, supply
of food to the population, even if at the level of 20-30 percent, depend on
those who consider us an enemy? But Russia cannot become a hostage to others’
plans to build up a sanction pressure. What if the European Union and the US
decide to put more pressure on us, and even agree to allocate many more billions
of dollars or euros as subsidies to their farmers? We don’t know their secret
plans.
Question: But so far they have not done anything of the
kind. We banned imports ourselves.
S.V.Lavrov: But I am saying once again: there are a lot of
countries dreaming to replace Europeans and Americans on our market. Argentina
and Brazil, for example, boast excellent meat.
Question: The oats are cheap, but the boats are expensive.
Proverbial wisdom.
S.V.Lavrov: No, the prices will be absolutely reasonable.
South Americans want to get a quota in our market. This is done within the
framework of possibilities offered by the WTO.
Question: In other words, you don’t feel any discomfort in
your work, Sergey Viktorovich?
S.V.Lavrov: So it is. I answer absolutely sincerely.
Firstly, this is professional challenge, if you will. Secondly, it is rather my
colleagues who feel inconveniences when they have to obscurely explain over the
telephone or through our ambassadors why they are postponing a visit to Moscow
that was coordinated. For God’s sake! Love can’t be forced. At different
international forums, ministers from the countries that have imposed sanctions
on Russia, come up to me one by one, taking me aside and asking me confusedly
to take it easy and understand; saying that they don’t want to but are
compelled to. Consensus, solidarity… This are the arguments in the overwhelming
majority of the states, which understand who is orchestrating these processes without
any damage for itself, soothing its geopolitical ambitions.
Maybe tense periods in international relations are
inevitable. But they end sooner or later. And this one will be left behind. But
at first everybody must get used to the idea that the world will not be
one-polar any longer. Meanwhile, we have to see relapses and muscle flexing.
Question: Russia’s non-alignment status can be considered as
a vantage point?
S.V.Lavrov: You see, classic alliances of the Cold War era
have run their course. I have already mentioned NATO’s wavering in search of
reason for existence. We have the Collective Security Treaty Organization, our
own military-political alliance. But there is no discipline of the rod in it.
Sometimes we hear – look how united are the members of the North Atlantic
Alliance in their voting at the United Nations: the US has given orders, and
all have raised their hands (but everybody knows that many of them were
strongarmed before that). As for representatives from the CSTO member
countries, they may support Russia’s initiative or abstain, or simply miss a
session, like it was when the UN General Assembly discussed a resolution after
the Crimean events. My answer is always simple: yes, we expect that our allies
will follow the agreements of the CSTO member countries about a common foreign
policy course, but we also understand that today’s world is multi-faceted and
multi-vector, and that is why we don’t seek to ban anyone from having nuances
in approaches to the settlement of this or that problem, and we surely don’t
strongarm or blackmail anyone.
Question: Take Kazakhstan and Belarus, for example, – they
are our partners in the Customs Union, but they did not support Russia’s food
embargo….
S.V.Lavrov: This is their right. Yes, they said that they were
not joining sanctions, but stressed that they will not allow to use their
territory for the violation of rules introduced by Russia. This is what
distinguishes old alliances from new ones. Today's unions should be flexible.
By the way, our strategic partnerships are not limited to the CSTO. We must
mention BRICS, bringing together Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa,
as well as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. In both cases, apart from
mutual economic interests, we are speaking about countries that are like-minded
on fundamental issues of world order.
Question: What does our readiness to unilaterally withdraw
from international agreements mean?
S.V.Lavrov: This is written in most international documents.
There is a standard procedure: as a rule a country must officially notify other
parties to the treaty and depositaries of its wish half a year in advance. And
this is all. A civilized approach. There can be different treaties, and
attitude to them changes. One must figure out in advance what one's move will
entail. When the United States and the Soviet Union signed the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty in the early 1970s, everybody realized that it was a real
contribution to curbing the arms race. If you give up on the total protection
of your territory, you are less tempted to attack an enemy. And the opponent
behaves the same way. Under George W. Bush, the US decided to withdraw from the
treaty, and I remember Vladimir Putin asking the American colleague whether it
was necessary to undermine this element of stability. Bush answered that
missile defence was not aimed against Russia, but was meant to control Iran,
and that is why, Russia could take any measures to ensure its own security. But
back in his time Bismarck said that it is not intentions but potentials that
are important in the art of war. Or, for example, take the Treaty on
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. It was signed at the moment when NATO was
opposed by the Soviet Union and other countries of the Warsaw Treaty. After the
socialist bloc ceased to exist, the document was changed, adapted to new
realities. Russia ratified it, but the West said it would sign it only after
our peacekeepers withdrew from Transnistria. Why on earth? There is no
mentioning of it in the treaty. As a result, the document became meaningless
because of NATO’s refusal to join it.
Question: I wonder, have your itineraries changed a lot of
late?
S.V.Lavrov: I wouldn’t say so. It was Berlin before Minsk,
and Paris a bit earlier. And now – Africa, a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization in Dushanbe, and then New York.
Question: What will be your mood on your trip to attend the
UNGA?
S.V.Lavrov: I haven’t thought about this trip yet, there is
a host of other things before it… A session of the UN General Assembly is a
familiar event. A representative of each country will mount the rostrum to say
something.
Question: But the mood will surely be different now.
S.V.Lavrov: We will first listen and then draw conclusions.
Question: Have there been any visit cancellations of late?
S.V.Lavrov: Mine have not been cancelled. The Japanese
counterpart was planning to visit Moscow in April, but for technical reasons he
asked to postpone the meeting till later… It is another thing that is
astonishing: representatives from countries that have nothing to do with the
European Union and sanctions against Russia say that US ambassadors everywhere
went to national authorities demanding that they freeze any contacts with
Moscow! Don’t go there, don’t receive them. Is this normal? It is somehow
amusing to work in the situation when Americans resort to such methods.
Honestly! I would have never imagined that a country that is on the whole
respectable could behave like this.
Question: Have you told it John Kerry to his face?
S.V.Lavrov: Of course, we discuss different issues with the
Secretary of State.
Question: You are never lost for words, Sergey Viktorovich.
Secret rumors have it that there is a stone on one of the shores of the Katun
River in the Altai Territory. Engraved in the stone is a scripture saying that
on that very same place Minister Lavrov told his British colleague Jack Straw
to get lost. The scripture is followed by the date.
S.V.Lavrov: Secret rumors have confused you. The stone is
not on the shore of the Katun River, but in my sauna. I took it home with me as
a rarity. Here is what had happened. I was with a company, which mostly
consisted of my former fellow students from the MGIMO-University, and we were
traditionally rafting down the river. One evening we reached another overnight
stop. We were dragging out the rafts, setting up tents, starting a fire and
cooking dinner. Everything was as usual. Using a satellite phone I called
Moscow and asked how things were in general. I was briefed that Jack Straw,
with whom we had established very good relations, had asked to get in touch
with him as soon as possible. You know that phone batteries do not last
forever, I had to save power in them and we agreed that London would call me in
half an hour. I switched on my phone exactly after that period of time. The
Brits called me and told me that Straw was busy at that moment and asked
whether it would be convenient if they called me again in ten minutes. After
ten minutes the situation repeated, and then again and again until I asked –
asked politely – to tell Jack that I would not be able to speak with him that
evening. This is what it was all about. One of my friends heard the dialogue
and then left a very footloose interpretation of it engraved in the stone.
Question: It seems that Russia's UN envoy Vitaly Churkin is
your true companion in terms of ability to clearly formulate. He is also
capable of explicitly expressing everything.
S.V.Lavrov: Vitaly is my old friend. In April 1992, we were
both promoted to posts of Russian deputy foreign ministers and since then our
paths often intersected. For example, when he worked in the Balkans, I was
responsible for that area.
Question: It is said that you were actively persuading
Vladimir Putin to appoint Churkin to the UN?
S.V.Lavrov: It was my proposal and I put forward arguments
in its favor. Considering the importance of the position, I asked the president
to receive Vitaly prior to his appointment and personally talk to him.
Question: How long have you been acquainted with Putin? And
how were you appointed to the post of Minister?
S.V.Lavrov: We first met in Moscow in November 1999.
Vladimir Vladimirovich was the head of the government at that time and I was
the permanent envoy to the UN and flew to Moscow for the visit of an Iraqi
Deputy Prime Minister, whose reception was held on the Krasnopresnenskaya
Embankment. Elected president in 2000, Putin arrived in New York for the
Millennium summit. We have seen each other more than once since then.
On March 6, 2004, I received a telephone call from head of
the Presidential Administration Dmitry Medvedev who invited me to Moscow. I
departed on the very same day. The following day, Vladimir Vladimirovich
received me and offered the post of Minister. Since then, we have maintained
permanent working contact, practically on a daily basis.
Question: When holding negotiations outside Russia how often
do you consult with the President?
S.V.Lavrov: Before trips I speak on the point in view, which
I intend to stick by, and after receiving instructions I maintain the
direction, which was worked out. I will not reveal all our secrets, but as a
rule we have several options for further actions. However, there are essential
cases sometimes, when any sort of a compromise is ruled out. Then I explain it
straight to Vladimir Vladimirovich. In extremely serious cases, when texts must
be edited and their content might imply double meaning, I call him on the phone
and inform about the peculiarities. This is how last September we reached an
agreement with Americans on the chemical weapons in Syria. The document
contained some disputable moments and I used to call the Kremlin from our
mission in Geneva.
Question: I know you use a cell telephone. You differ from
others who prefer using rotary dialers only.
S.V.Lavrov: But the cellular communication is not
appropriate for contacting the President and discussing work-related issues. It
is only used for organizational tasks such as who, where, when…
Question: How did [Edward] Snowden and [Julian] Assange
change the present-day world order in your opinion?
S.V.Lavrov: We learnt nothing fundamentally new. As I recall
now, when I started reading the information disclosed by Assange I did not find
any revelations concerning personal characteristics of any given person on the
world arena or concerning the description of work methods used either by
governments or secret services. We had already known all of this.
Question: What about Hillary Clinton's memoirs? Have you
read them?
S.V.Lavrov: I thumbed the book through. It contains an
alphabetic index and I looked through the sections about myself, colleagues in
the UN administration and about a number of European countries. It was
interesting.
Question: The former US Secretary of State was very specific
in describing Putin.
S.V.Lavrov: Well, definitely! This is considered in the West
to be an indispensable part of any program. However, sensible opinions also
expressed there, but they are usually expressed by diplomats and politicians,
who have already retired. Those who are in the government's employ or intend to
run for a high office are sticking by the party's line and in a bid to
implement the current American agenda they, in fact, are trying to outdo each
other.
Question: You have said that you maintain permanent working
contacts with Putin. How does it usually work?
S.V.Lavrov: We talk while on foreign visits, during which I
always escort the President, we meet before receptions of foreign leaders in
Russia. Vladimir Vladimirovich can listen as no one else can. This is neither a
compliment nor flattery, but a statement of a very important trait of
character. Putin always gives an opportunity to speak out and never delivers
ultimatums. Not a single sensible idea, which can help find a constructive
solution to a problem, whether it is an economic issue or a crisis similar to
the one in Ukraine, can escape his attention.
Question: Have you ever managed to make your boss change his
mind? It is known that before the signing of the so-called "Dima Yakovlev
law" you met with Putin, made counterarguments.
S.V.Lavrov: I reported my assessment of legal aspects and
possible consequences after the adoption of the document. It entered into force
in December 2012, a few months earlier we signed in Washington an agreement
with the Americans on cooperation in adoption of children, which took much
efforts because we had more and more problems with the Russian children in the
United States, there were abuses, rapes and even murders. The Department of
State abdicated responsibility, arguing that according to American laws such
cases are under the jurisdiction of separate state court systems. As a result,
we achieved the adoption of the intergovernmental agreement, and when reporting
to Vladimir Putin in December 2012 I suggested that the denunciation not be
included in the "Dima Yakovlev law", because I hoped it would allow
us to monitor the situation with the children adopted earlier. Throughout 2013
the agreement remained in force, and frankly speaking, I found my assessment of
the American government's ability to fulfill the assumed commitments too
optimistic. There was no progress on any issue we raised before the State
Department, including the notorious Ranch for Kids, an orphanage in Montana
which admitted children abandoned by their new American parents. Over the three
years we failed to get there.
Question: They say, that upon your confirmation to the post
of Foreign Minister, you spoke with the President to reserve the right for
annual rafting in mountain rivers with friends without security guards. Is it
true?
S.V.Lavrov: It was my request which was supported by
Vladimir Vladimirovich.
Question: Have you gone rafting this year?
S.V.Lavrov: In early August, but not for a long time. I did
not have time for more.
Question: Was it your friends who nicknamed you
"Elk"?
S.V.Lavrov: The nickname stuck to me when I was a student.
When I went to MGIMO, all four summers I was in student construction brigades.
We started in Khakassia, then there was Tuva, the third year we spent in the
Far East and the fourth – in Yakutia. I was a foreman, made everyone work a
lot, and, probably, that's why I was given this nickname. I did not argue.
Question: But even before construction brigades you were
digging under the television center.
S.V.Lavrov: Yes, before the first year in the university we
were sent to Ostankino, we were digging a construction pit for the building of
the television center.
Question: The TV set in your office on Smolenskaya Square is
not used as furniture, is it? Do you turn it on?
S.V.Lavrov: Occasionally. I watch all Russian news channels,
CNN, BBC, and Ukrainian News One.
Question: Do you understand Ukrainian?
S.V.Lavrov: I get the general meaning, but I'm unable to
comprehend everything. Both literally and figuratively.
Question: Do you still speak your first foreign language,
Sinhalese?
S.V.Lavrov: I studied English at school. I started learning
Sinhalese and French in MGIMO. I can still write in Sinhalese but I'm not sure
I can speak it. I have had no opportunity to keep my Sinhalese fluent, I have
not practiced for a long time. Actually, since I left Sri Lanka in 1976.
Question: Do you still drink Ceylon tea?
S.V.Lavrov: I haven’t thought about it. I need to find out.
They make black tea and I don’t ask where it is from. Maybe from Sri Lanka.
Generally speaking, I pay little attention to food. As long as I am not hungry.
Question: You said during an Evening Urgant program that
during your tenure as Minister your have visited 136 countries. Has the list
expanded by now?
S.V.Lavrov: Frankly? I named the first figure that came to
my mind. Of course, no one, including me, has counted these trips.
Question: What about football matches, Sergey Viktorovich?
S.V.Lavrov: Playing or attending them?
Question: Both.
S.V.Lavrov: We go to the field on Sunday mornings, and we
also try to do that on Wednesday evenings, but it happens seldom because I am
busy. There are seven players in each team and we use handball goals. Over the
past few years I had little time to go the stadium. I was looking forward to
the opening of the home arena for Spartak. I hope fans will find it comfortable
and cozy. When the team played in Luzhniki, it was not very interesting to
watch football sitting all the way behind the racetracks. I wished I had
binoculars! It is better to watch it on TV, when you can enjoy the details of
videoplaybacks.
Question: When did you get addicted to FC Spartak?
S.V.Lavrov: I guess, ever since I was born. As far back as I
can remember. I'll try to respond more precisely: since to first grade of
school. My mom was away on a business trip then, I went to school and stayed
with my grandparents in Noginsk – a city that I believe should get back its
original name given by Empress Catherine II – Bogorodsk. Their house was
situated on the outskirts of the city, and the Spartak stadium was nearby. In
summer, we played football there, in winter we played hockey, took part in the Zolotaya
Shaiba (Golden Puck) tournament. That’s there that my love for the team
originates from. Spartak became a part of my life.
Question: Are you afraid that we may have problems with the
hosting of the 2018 FIFA World Cup after Crimean clubs joined the Russian
Football Union?
S.V.Lavrov: I hope sports will not be affected by politics.
We remember similar boycott stories that happened 30 years ago. First, it
happened with the Olympic Games in Moscow, then the Los Angeles Games were
boycotted by Soviet athletes. It made life better for no one. Of course, the
bloodlust of those who want to play nasty tricks on us at any cost is endless,
but nevertheless, I repeat, we hope for common sense of the FIFA and UEFA
leadership. But you are bringing up serious issues again, and our time is up. I
have to knot my tie.
* * *
Interview
of the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to ITAR-TASS, September 10,
2014, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Russian Federation
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