With the world's media focussing on
Donald Trump's behaviour at the recent G7 meeting held in Canada, his
post-meeting tweets and the fact that the leaders and their sherpas actually
managed to cobble together an official communique, little attention has been
paid to the actual content of the communique, particularly as it relates to
Russia, a former member of the group, back when it was known as the G8.
Here's what was said about Russia in
the communique itself:
"We urge Russia to cease its
destabilizing behaviour to undermine democratic systems and its support of the
Syrian regime. We condemn the attack using a military-grade nerve agent in
Salisbury, United Kingdom. We share and agree with the United Kingdom’s
assessment that it is highly likely that the Russian Federation was responsible
for the attack, and that there is no plausible alternative explanation. We urge
Russia to live up to its international obligations, as well as its
responsibilities as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, to uphold
international peace and security. Notwithstanding, we will continue to engage
with Russia on addressing regional crises and global challenges, where it is in
our interests. We reiterate our condemnation of the illegal annexation of
Crimea and reaffirm our enduring support for Ukrainian sovereignty,
independence and territorial integrity within its internationally-recognized
borders. We maintain our commitment to assisting Ukraine in implementing its
ambitious and necessary reform agenda. We recall that the continuation of
sanctions is clearly linked to Russia’s failure to demonstrate complete
implementation of its commitments in the Minsk Agreements and respect for Ukraine’s
sovereignty and we fully support the efforts within the Normandy Format and of
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe for a solution to the
conflict in Eastern Ukraine. Should its actions so require, we also stand ready
to take further restrictive measures in order to increase costs on Russia. We
remain committed to support Russian civil society and to engage and invest in
people-to-people contact."
Note the use of the words' "highly
likely" when referring to the Skripal incident. It is also
interesting to note that the G7 leaders are urging Russia to "uphold
international peace and security" but that there is absolutely no mention
of the United States uninvited participation in the Syrian civll war. The
repeated mention of Ukraine can be laid at the feet of Chrystia Freeland,
Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs who is of Ukrainian descent, a person who
has made her anti-Russian viewpoint a key part of her term as Canada's
representative on the world stage, a stance that has earned her a Russian
travel ban. While she claims to be a Russophile and actually lived in
Moscow, it is quite clear that she is strongly anti-Putin with comments like this from an article that she
wrote for Quartz as a contributor to the Brookings Institute:
"I made the Russian list of the
unwelcome as a three-fer: an activist Ukrainian-Canadian, a politician (I was
elected to Parliament in 2013 to represent Toronto Centre), and a journalist
with a long paper trail that frequently displeased the Kremlin, since I covered
Moscow’s brutal war in Chechnya in the 1990s and also wrote a book about the
rise of the Russian oligarchs. I interviewed Putin himself in 2000, shortly after
he took over as president. When, in 2011, he decided to take the presidency
back from his protégé, Dmitry Medvedev, I wrote a column in The New York Times
arguing that Putin’s Russia was on its way to becoming a full-fledged
dictatorship that would eventually be vulnerable to a popular uprising....
This subterfuge (regarding the Ukraine) is, arguably, Putin’s
single most dramatic resort to the Soviet tactic of the Big Lie. Through his
virtual monopoly of the Russian media, Putin has airbrushed away the truth of
what happened a quarter of a century ago: the dissolution of the USSR was the
result not of Western manipulation but of the failings of the Soviet state,
combined with the initiatives of Soviet reformist leaders who had widespread
backing from their citizens. Moreover, far from conspiring to tear the USSR
apart, Western leaders in the late 1980s and early nineties used their
influence to try to keep it together."
And Ms. Freeland wonders why she is
banned from entering Russia.
In addition to appearing in the main body
of the G7's communique, although not specifically named, Russia also appears in the Charlevoix Commitment on Defending Democracy from Foreign
Threats as you can infer from these quotes:
"Democracy and the rules-based
international order are increasingly being challenged by authoritarianism and
the defiance of international norms. In particular, foreign actors seek to
undermine our democratic societies and institutions, our electoral processes,
our sovereignty and our security. These malicious, multi-faceted and
ever-evolving tactics constitute a serious strategic threat which we commit to
confront together, working with other governments that share our democratic
values. Defending democracy will require us to adopt a strategic approach that
is consistent with universal human rights and fundamental freedoms, our
international commitments to peace and security, and that promotes equality. We
welcome the work of G7 Foreign and Security Ministers in Toronto to establish a
common understanding of unacceptable actions by foreign actors with the
malicious intent of undermining our countries’ democratic systems as the
basis for our collective and individual response."
Here are the group's solutions to the
"Russia electoral interference problem":
"1.) Respond to foreign
threats, both together and individually, in order to meet the challenges facing
our democracies.
2.) Strengthen G7 cooperation to
prevent, thwart and respond to malign interference by foreign actors aimed at
undermining the democratic processes and the national interests of a G7 state.
3.) Establish a G7 Rapid Response
Mechanism to strengthen our coordination to identify and respond to diverse and
evolving threats to our democracies, including through sharing information and
analysis, and identifying opportunities for coordinated response.
4.) Share lessons learned and best
practices in collaboration with governments, civil society and the private
sector that are developing related initiatives including those that promote
free, independent and pluralistic media; fact-based information; and freedom of
expression.
5.) Engage directly with internet service
providers and social media platforms regarding malicious misuse of information
technology by foreign actors, with a particular focus on improving transparency
regarding the use and seeking to prevent the illegal use of personal data and
breaches of privacy.
6.) Support public learning and civic
awareness aimed at promoting critical thinking skills and media literacy on
intentionally misleading information, and improving online security and safety.
7.) In accordance with applicable laws,
ensure a high level of transparency around sources of funding for political
parties and all types of political advertising, especially during election
campaigns."
You have to love two parts of this
solution:
1.) preventing the illegal use
of personal data - this is particularly egregious given that
these governments are well known for spying on their citizens and
using our private data for their own nefarious purposes to which we are not
privy.
2.) ensuring a high level of
transparency around the funding of political parties, particularly
during election campaigns - given that American elections are
driven by so-called dark money and by the American oligarchy, we all know that,
while this sentiment is heart-warming, it will never really be enacted to
any degree.
The communique from the leaders of the
G7 is just another means of promoting the anti-Russia sentiment that has become
so pervasive over the past few years. The content of the communique does
give us a strong sense of how isolated Russia has become, even with Donald
Trump's strong suggestions that Russia be allowed to rejoin the G8.
Fortunately, most people will never read either the communique or the
Charlevoix Commitment, making the propagandizing efforts of the G7 leaders
rather moot.
It requires a special point of view totally divorced from principles of the United Nations to be able to dance around Russia's flagrant violation of Ukraines territorial integrity.
ReplyDeleteI don't expect that an equal statement on American actions would have been more likely to get the agreement of the great pumpkin.
That Canada's foreign minister is a learned and respected expert on Eastern Europe should not be used as a reason the conduct a drive by shooting art her reputation.
Following on the heels of the Trumpian fast and loose use of the facts by the Whitehouse causes one to wonder if this style of dissembling has become an American characteristic.
Sadly, I have to disagree with your views on Ms. Freeland. As a Canadian, I feel that she is an embarrassment to Canada on the international stage and that Trudeau could have done much better in his choice of our representative on the world stage.
ReplyDeleteThe Russian Federation has no responsibilities under the Minsk Agreement. Ukraine does. By marketing this lie the leaders of the G-7 regimes and their sherpas (nice one!) have demonstrated their continuing, obstinate ignorance and Russophobia which, of course, goes together like Chester and Spike. Bow. wow.
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