Judging Freedom - [SPECIAL] - Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov - w/ Judge Napolitano, Larry Johnson, & Mario Nawfal
Episode Date: March 12, 2025[SPECIAL] - Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov - w/ Judge Napolitano, Larry Johnson, & Mario NawfalSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art...19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
you you the Of course, Mr. Minister, it's a pleasure to speak to you, sir.
The first question I have is, as I speak to people here in Moscow, there's a perception
that the US has changed.
They're describing the US completely differently under President Trump.
Do you think the US as a culture, not only the perception,
but do you think has it fundamentally changed
and their perception of Russia and President Putin?
I think what is going on in the United States
is a return to normalcy.
The United States has always been the country of two big parties who competed between themselves,
who changed ownership of the White House.
But the division during my years in the United States, which is starting from 1981.
I've been there several times,
serving for a long period.
Compared to that time,
the division now is absolutely striking.
On that occasion, the main dividing line
between the Democrats and the Republicans was more
taxes, less taxes, abortions, things which would be part of a normal Christian life.
And within this Christianity values, the entire politics were built.
Arguing with each other, but within the values
which everybody accepted.
With the introduction of neoliberal ideas,
neo-con ideas, but mostly neoliberal ideas,
the divide became deeper, wider, and culmination was the first election of President
Trump, which he himself admitted was a surprise to him, and he wasn't really getting ready. Now he is ready and it is clear
how many, 49 days yet and such a rich agenda is already thrown into the public domain.
So this split motivated first of all by the departure from Christian values, by
the leadership of the Democratic Party, in my view, by promoting without any limits the
LGBTQ whatever comes next.
Same, I mean, one WC for any gender.
I once found myself in Sweden where the OSCE was conducting a ministerial meeting
and it was in a stadium,
specially arranged for the ministerial meeting and it was in a stadium specially arranged for the
ministerial meeting and I wanted to get out and to go out and saw WC sign and I
asked the guy who was accompanying me whether this was gents or ladies he said
everybody it's it's I don't want want any of my friends to experience this themselves.
So this, and this is just of course a tiny manifestation
of those divisions, but the America as we rust belt.
But the America as we...
Rust Belt. Rust Belt.
Rust Belt.
Rust Belt America is of course not very much keen
to embrace those values and the persistence
with which, you know, fanatic persistence
with which those values were brought,
promoted to the population certainly made quite a number
of people to decide for themselves
that this is not what they want
and they supported Donald Trump.
So it's back to normalcy as we understand normalcy.
We are Orthodox Christians.
The values are basically the same,
though Catholicism now is becoming more and more
deviating to the new trends,
which we cannot understand
and which we would not accept. But the fact that a normal administration
without any, you know, un-Christian ideas came to power
many, you know, un-Christian ideas came to power and the reaction was such an explosion in the media, in the politics all over the world.
It's very interesting and it's very telling.
When we met, hope I don't reveal any secret, when we met in NER-RIAT with Marco Rubio and
Mike Waltz and Steve Witkoff.
They suggested the meeting and they said, look, we want normal relations.
Normal relations in the sense that the foundation of the American
foreign policy under the Trump administration is national interest of the United States.
This is absolute and without any discussion.
But at the same time, we understand that other countries also have their national
interests. And those countries who have their national interests and don't play into the
hands of somebody else's interests, we are ready to have serious discussion. It is very
well understood, they told us, that countries like the United States and
Russia would never have their national interests the same. They would not
coincide maybe even 50 or less percent, but when they do coincide, this situation, if we are responsible politicians, must be used to develop this simultaneous
and similar interest into something practical which would be mutually beneficial, be it
economic projects, infrastructural projects, something else. And then another message went, but when the interests do not coincide and contradict each
other, again, this is a response.
Then the responsible countries must do everything not to allow this contradiction to degenerate into confrontation, especially military confrontation,
which would be disastrous for many other countries.
We told them, we fully share this logic.
It's absolutely the way President Putin wants and does conduct our foreign policy. He always, since he became president,
underlines in his contacts that we are not imposing
anything on anyone and that we are
looking for a balance of interest.
Same logic, absolutely.
And some people would say, oh, Russia is now changing and is turning away from the East,
from China, from India, from Africa.
It's an illusion.
And euphoria is not what should be guiding us in foreign policy.
By the way, China for decades has relations
with the United States based exactly on the formula
which I just described.
They sometimes call each other names,
which we don't mind.
I mean, we also, in modern diplomacy,
are using to get to new vocabulary.
But they never interrupted the dialogue.
They would say, hands off Taiwan,
hands off South China Sea.
But let's meet and talk.
It's the same approach, the same logic, which is now accepted by the Trump administration
and its relationship with the Russian Federation.
And I think it's only right.
There are no two persons who would be 100% alike.
And same with countries.
And countries who can seriously influence
the fate of the world, militarily,
the nuclear powers in particular,
of course they have special responsibility.
Not to shout at each other, but to sit down and talk
and say, more or less like it was handled by cowboys
and many of the Hollywood mothers.
He said that you know and I know that you know that I know and what do you, are you
going to tell me something?
So Mr. Minister, a pleasure to be here.
An early happy birthday to you.
You'll have a special birthday coming up.
I have the same one shortly after.
Really?
Yes, we have the same day.
No, no, shortly after. We are the same age. We're one in the same year.
Yes.
Thank you for inviting us here.
I want you to talk to us about NATO.
And the reaction in the Foreign Ministry to the treachery of NATO, and how the foreign
ministry will view it if and when the United States leaves NATO?
Well, it's a long story, of course, and it is a story about illusions, beliefs, disappointments,
about partnership degenerating into rivalry and then confrontation and animosities.
When, well I wouldn't recite the story about how the Jim Baker and others promised to Gorbachev
that NATO wouldn't move an inch to the east.
And when they had to modify this offer,
because GDR and West Germany were merging,
it was agreed on paper legally.
Now they say that there is no legal obligation
not to expand NATO. Fine, if you can only be made implement your promise by a court, then of course you need
legal obligations all over you.
But if you are a person of dignity, a man of dignity,
if you agreed on something by political commitment,
you have to deliver.
But at that time, when Germany was reunified,
it was written in the legal paper,
this two plus four process,
that the GDR would become part of Federal Republic of Germany
and thus would become part of NATO, but there would be no NATO infrastructure whatsoever
on the GDR, former GDR's territory. They are backtracking on this one. Now we get, they are deploying some NATO command
in Judea, in the East German.
But Gorbachev believed that this was
the serious promise, serious commitment.
Then we were very much disappointed to
watch how NATO not only of course accepted, admitted East Germany, but by
2004 the expansion already, the NATO expansion included the three Baltic republics, former republics of the Soviet
Union, and then this role was, this ball was rolling, picking up more and more contenders,
those who wanted to become the members. And Foreign Minister Primakov in 1997,
he was suggesting
to have some understanding between Russia and NATO.
NATO-Russia Founding Act was negotiated,
which was about equality, about mutual respect, about cooperation
in various fields, against terrorism, against illegal migration.
Actually, on that basis, NATO-Russia Council was created, which was running like 80 to 90 projects annually.
There was cooperative program on Afghanistan.
The Americans would get the Russian helicopters, we'll pay for them.
We would service them on the ground. The Russian Soviet-made helicopters were most appropriate for the
Afghan conditions. Counterterrorism, drug trafficking. And then the expansion continues. And at some point, we, it was still Yeltsin.
Primakov already became prime minister.
In 1999, there was an OSCE summit in Istanbul.
And Yeltsin went there, they had meetings with his colleagues from the United States, European capitals,
and they decided that to allay any fears about what NATO is and about what NATO further plans are, they have to adopt a strong political declaration
on indivisibility of security.
And they adopted the Istanbul Declaration,
which says each country has the right to choose alliances,
but no country has the right to strengthen its security
at the expense of the security of others. And therefore, the most important paragraph, and therefore, no country, group of countries or organizations in the OSCE area could ever claim dominance.
NATO was doing exactly the opposite.
So now, after the beginning of the special military
operation, which as Putin repeatedly stated,
was the decision, because all other attempts, all other alternatives to bring things into
some positive dimension failed for 10 years after the illegal coup in Kiev, in violation of the deal signed the night before and guaranteed
by the Germans, French, and Poles, five months, the deal was about five months period to prepare
for general elections.
And in the meantime, government of national unity
would rule.
Next morning, the opposition took government's building,
went to the crowd in the Maidan,
and said, congratulate us,
we created the government of the winners.
Winners and national unity, it's slightly different.
I hope it will be national unity in Syria,
but so far it is really a dangerous place.
But in Ukraine, when these people
who came to power through the coup,
and their first statement was that they would cancel
the status of the Russian language,
their first action was sending armed fighters to storm Crimean parliament when they called
terrorists, the citizens of eastern and southern Ukraine, who said, guys, wait a minute, you came to
power by an illegal coup.
We don't want to take any orders from you.
Leave us alone.
And they said, oh, you are terrorists.
And they started army operation against their own citizens.
Thus launching the war, which ended in February 2015 by signing the Minsk agreements
which President Macron tries now to interpret as something which Putin didn't want to implement.
It was really a very funny speech by President Macron.
It also relates to NATO, by the way,
because he was saying, okay, let them live
and I will protect all of you
with my three or four nuclear bombs.
But on that occasion,
we spent 17 hours nonstop in Minsk and the deal was agreed.
And after that, well, I'm deviating from NATO, but you would understand me. And after the deal was agreed, it was endorsed by the Security Council.
And a very interesting moment.
When we finished negotiations, Poroshenko, with support of Oland and Merkel, said that
he would not sign this paper unless it is signed by the separatists, as he called
them.
And the heads of the two self-proclaimed republics, Donetsk and Lugansk, they were in the same
city of Minsk in another hotel, and they said they would not sign this because it was negotiated
without them.
And this was a document providing for territorial integrity of Ukraine with just special status
given to these two tiny territories, to be frank.
And that they already proclaimed independence, they cannot betray their people, and it took
us and some persuasion to make them sign this paper, which indeed said special status inside
Ukraine, Russian language, the right to be consulted when prosecutors and judges are
appointed for these municipalities, actually.
But their rights, the special status, must be consolidated in the Constitution, and the
exact language must be negotiated directly between Kiev and these two places.
It's part of the Minsk agreement endorsed by the Security Council.
Now, I mean very soon after it was enforced, the Germans, the French, and the Ukrainians themselves
started saying, we never talk to the separatists.
And Macron, when he came to Moscow just a week or so
before we started the military operation,
he was at the press conference.
And then during this infamous phone conversation with Putin, which he, president of France,
leaked, he was saying that, Vladimir, you cannot insist on this legitimate government
agreeing to talk to the separatists.
And Putin was objecting, saying this government came to power as a
result of a coup. Let them be grateful to all of us that we are trying to legitimize
this entire situation and this entire country. But don't forget that the Minsk agreements
bluntly say direct dialogue with this whom you call separatists. It's a very shameful
dialogue with this what whom you call separatists. It's a very shameful way which the French and the Germans behaved and eventually those who signed on behalf of Ukraine, Germany and
France, Poroshenko, Merkel and Hollande being retired already, they stated in an interview, we never intended
to implement this.
We just needed to buy time to push more weapons into Ukraine.
And of course, NATO was playing a key role, this Rammstein process led by the United States
during Biden time.
Now the Americans want to give it to the Brits,
I understand, but the Europeans do not,
do not stop their efforts.
On the contrary, they kind of increase them
and call for more and more support, becoming more and more emphatic and I would even say
nervous.
And the question whether NATO can survive without the United States is, I understand,
motivated by these observations, I don't think the Americans would drop from
NATO.
At least President Trump never hinted that this might be the case.
What he did bluntly said was that if you want us to protect you, to give you security guarantees,
you pay what is necessary.
It's still to be discussed what is necessary, two and a half, five percent, anything in
the middle.
But he also said that those who fulfill the criteria of the percentage of GNP to be contributed to NATO, then the United States
would guarantee that they are safe and secure.
But he doesn't want to provide these guarantees, security guarantees to Ukraine and Zelensky, he has his own view of the situation, which he bluntly presents every
now and then, that this war should have never started, that the pulling Ukraine into NATO
in violation of its constitution and violation of the Declaration of Independence of 1991 on the basis of which we recognized
Ukraine as a sovereign state for several reasons, including that this declaration was saying
no NATO, no blocs, neutral status. And another thing which this declaration also confirmed and solidified, the all rights of
Russian and all other national minorities to be respected, which, by the way, is still
in the Ukrainian constitution in spite of the fact that the series of laws they passed since 2019 culminated in total
prohibition, legal prohibition of the Russian language in media, education, culture, even
in day-to-day life.
If you come to a store and ask the store attendant to be assisted in Russian, he or she might
tell you to speak the right language.
Such issues happen.
And of course, this was a very different situation. Since then, they included the NATO membership into the Constitution
while keeping the national minorities guarantees. They declared that NATO is the future of Ukraine, European Union also. When they started saying these things, European Union still kept some
resemblance of an economic grouping. Now it lost it altogether and Führer Ursula is mobilizing everybody, mobilizing everybody to remilitarize Europe.
Some unbelievable sums of money are being mentioned. And many people think that this is a trick to divert attention of the population from
those dozens and hundreds of billions of euros which have been spent during the COVID days and during the assistance to Ukraine
without proper auditing. It's a discussion which is being raised.
EU also lost its independence, it's lost its economic meaning, because when a German
lost its economic meaning because when a German government spokes says, no, no, no, no, we would never restore this gas pipeline, North Stream 2, because we have to get rid of the
dependence on the Russian gas.
But this was the basis for the German economy, for prosperity of the German economy.
They pay now four or five times more than similar industries pay for gas in the United
States.
And business is moving to the U.S.
Deindustrialization of Europe is taking place.
And they are ready to sacrifice all this
just for the sake of achieving ideological goal,
defeating Russia.
They were saying in the battlefield,
Russia must be strategically defeated.
Now they say we would not accept capitulation of Ukraine.
It's a change, a change.
Almost 360 degrees as Anna-Lena Baerbock says.
But European Union is no longer peaceful economic project.
They want their own army, speaking of the future of NATO.
There are voices, OK, if the United States doesn't want
to be actively involved in European affairs.
Let's have our own NATO, our own military alliance.
But this is the game and process.
Some statements are intended just to test the ground, what
will be the response from the other side
of the ocean.
And I think one and a half years ago, European Union, they signed an agreement with NATO,
which basically subordinated EU to North Atlantic alliance, providing this mobility.
In other words, NATO equipment, NATO troops can use the territory of non-member, non-NATO
EU states. If there are such states still left, Austria, Ireland, but it is not that important And to say, you know, for peace-loving people, to say, Prime Minister of Denmark, she said
that these days Ukraine is weak, Ukraine cannot be fairly treated now. Therefore, for Ukraine, today, peace is worse than war.
She said this. Yes, let's pump Ukraine with weapons again, and when we have shaken Russian
position,
then let's see whether we can talk.
And the chief of German intelligence,
couple of days ago said that it would be bad
for Ukraine and for Europe if the war ends before 2029.
And 2030 even better.
in 1929 and 2030 even better. Yes, they say these things.
And when President Trump was interrogating President Zelensky in the Oval Office, asking
him many times, you don't want to negotiate, Zelensky was trying to avoid an answer
And of course they are they are very much concerned that
Irregularities that we put it very mildly by the Biden era
with Pentagon supplies to Ukraine
with without with Pentagon supplies to Ukraine, without
possibility to see where this money went,
Elon Musk is trying to do this.
We are not taking any pleasure from this.
But this is about
governments, the Biden administration,
Ursula von der Leyen and her commission, the Brits
who regularly accuse Russia of corruption, who regularly accuse Russia of violating human
rights, and who basically, whatever international issue they discuss,
they start with human rights.
Iran, Venezuela, Cuba of course, Nicaragua, South Africa now violated human rights by
passing the law on land. Central Asia, whenever they... there are several formats between
the Western Central Asia. Human rights are on top of everything, everywhere. But on Ukraine, where the Russian language has been exterminated legally and physically,
there is a special agency to watch for this legislation to be fully implemented.
Nobody ever mentioned human rights except us.
Now Hungarians, Bulgarians start raising this issue because they also have their minorities which was carved up mostly by Stalin after World War II, cutting through the, basically
like colonial powers did in Africa.
Look at the African map.
Just by a ruler, they draw the borders. In the case of Ukraine and its neighbors, it's different because it was individually
carved out, but divided nations, yes.
And therefore, after the coup, when we started talking to Poroshenko, when he was pledging that he would
never allow the war between the Ukrainian army and the eastern citizens of Ukraine.
And when he was saying that we will be faithful to our commitment regarding national minorities.
Federalization was very seriously discussed between myself, John Kerry, Katy Ashton, who was the EU foreign policy boss at that time, and the guy whom Kiev delegated.
It was April 2014.
And we seriously discussed.
Nobody mentioned Crimea.
It was a done deal already.
And we developed a paper saying that there must be some gathering of the heads of the Ukrainian regions,
and they have to discuss how to continue to live in a state which used to be a unitary state,
but the minority rights mattered.
It was 2014.
Then everybody forgot about this. Zelensky, who also came to power under the slogan
that he would implement the Minsk agreements.
Less than a few months after he was inaugurated,
he was saying very different things.
We are a unitary state.
There would be no special status.
I don't talk to separatists and so on and so forth.
And another lie which Emmanuel Macron said in his recent pathetic statement was about a meeting in Paris in
December 2019.
Macron, Merkel, Putin, Zelensky, which the Germans and the French convened to save the
Minsk agreements.
And there was a preparatory work which culminated
in a draft document agreed by experts,
by ministers of the four countries,
and then presented to the presidents and chancellor.
And it was, you know, consensus.
It was consensus, and it said that there would be disengagement at three areas on the line
of contact immediately,
as the beginning of this engagement of forces along the entire duration of the line of contact.
Agreed.
And when it was shown to the leaders,
everybody was satisfied.
Zelensky said, no, no, no,
I can only agree to try to do this in three experimental areas,
not along the entire line of contact.
Nobody could understand why, but he insisted.
But the main thing that he never disengaged even
at these three locations.
And the military activities continued.
So where NATO comes into it,
I remember that it was about NATO.
Well, NATO was certainly providing him with weapons,
with intelligence data.
It continues until now.
Americans announced that they are withdrawing,
maybe temporarily, maybe not.
They are withdrawing the instructors
and experts who helped guide high-tech missiles, but others remain there.
You know, when...
No, one thing about NATO. One more thing about NATO.
NATO used to be proud that they are defensive alliance, that the only thing which concerns
them is to defend territories of the member states.
A couple of years ago at the summit, I don't remember where that summit was. The then Secretary General Stoltenberg already said,
we need to be more active in Indo-Pacific region.
He was asked by a journalist,
but you insisted that you are about defense
of your territories.
He said, yes, absolutely,
but the threats to our territories
now emanates from the South China Sea, from the Strait of Taiwan, and so on and so forth.
And NATO started building there non-inclusive blocks, troikas, quads, aucus. Then they encouraged this Indo-Pacific quartet,
Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Korea. They developed their cooperation with Japan and South Korea, joint exercises, and with South Korea the
nuclear elements already are involved and discussed.
So NATO, they are opening, as far as I understand, an office of NATO in Tokyo or some of the
islands. They're trying to pull some ASEAN countries out
and to bring them into this limited membership
closed clubs.
Philippines is case in point.
Singapore is case in point.
And the concept of security, which was developed by ASEAN through many, many, many decades,
and which included participation of everybody on an equal footing, including China, U.S.,
India, Russia, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Korea.
This concept, based on consensus, is now being undermined quite considerably, which is very coincided with the period when we started rethinking our own security and Eurasian security.
Exactly Eurasian, not European, Eurasian.
Each continent, Africa, Latin America, they have continental-wide organizations.
African Union, CELAC in Latin America and Caribbean, and only Eurasia, the biggest,
the most prosperous, the most developed and rich continent, doesn't have a continent-wide
organization. All attempts of Russia to be part of some security cooperation process were about Euro-Atlantic
schemes.
OECD, NATO, Russia, EU became Euro-Atlantic very soon, and it didn't work.
So what we are now trying to discuss, not imposing anything on anybody, is a vision
of Eurasian continental architecture without prejudging the shape, but just to sit down and to talk on the basis of openness
of this hypothetical eventual architecture to all continental countries.
Let them keep NATO if they so wish.
Let them keep OSCE. But there are Eurasian Economic Union, Organization of Collective Security Treaty, Commonwealth
of Independent States, ASEAN.
There is an organization of the countries of South Asia.
Not very active, but still. There is Gulf Cooperation Council
by the Arab monarchies who are now normalizing their relations with Iran, and we promote
this. So all these sub-regional developments, most of them are economic and it would not hurt if we unite these efforts,
you know, organize a division of labor to save money, to save effort, to harmonize the economic plans.
Putin called it great Eurasian partnership.
And who knows, maybe many years from now,
it would be a material basis for some security architecture, which
must not be close to the Western part of the continent.
Well, this is not very brief, but.
Really?
That's fascinating.
Shortly, both of you.
Yeah, Larry, please.
I'm not sure I trust my own country. And I know that the Russian government is quite sincere in looking to pursue a diplomatic
solution.
What troubles me, and it's something that I continue to hear now from people in significant
positions.
Just as the United States cynically developed a relationship with China in 1972 under Nixon,
it was for the express purpose of going after then the Soviet Union to try, wanted to make
sure that they split them apart.
I have heard several people and I know that this
Elbridge Colby who is going to be like the number three person in the
Department of Defense
that they see China
as the enemy and they believe that they can split Russia from China
and again use
you, not you personally Mr. Minister but the country, as a wedge against
China. Now I try to say that's foolishness because unlike the United
States the Russian government takes its agreements seriously and adheres
to them.
So how do you think, you know, what will be Russia's approach in juggling this, let's
call it subterfuge, by the United States to on the one hand offer you a hand of friendship, but at the same time, they have not released
their desire to destroy your country and to also use you cynically against the Chinese.
Well, we have been through this, as you mentioned, in 1972 when Nixon wanted this, the relationship in this triangle to be like this.
The relations between the US and China and the US and Russia, both must be better than
the relations between Moscow and China.
A combination. both must be better than the relations between Moscow and China. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A combination.
Well, it's a nice philosophical construction,
but the current situation is radically different.
We never had the relations with China which were that good, that confidential, that long-term
built, and that would be enjoying support of the peoples of both countries. The Americans know that we would not betray our commitments, legal commitments, but also
the political commitments which we develop with the Chinese.
We have problems, we have difficulties in our relations, mostly because of the sanctions,
because the companies want to avoid being punished.
Some of the very promising projects, logistical, infrastructural projects in Siberia are being
delayed, but we are not in a hurry. And the Chinese, of course, are not in a hurry.
And the Chinese, of course, are never in a hurry.
They always see over horizon.
This is the national character, and we respect this.
Actually, again, I wouldn't reveal a secret. When Biden and Putin met in June
21 in Geneva, it was in the foreign ministers present, Biden said, you
know, I start rethinking the absolutism of democracy because the countries who have authoritarian rulers, they cope much better with the COVID infection
than we are. In our case, each state has some kind of leeway and they decide to vaccinate or
not to vaccinate. And the Chinese and Russia, he said, acted better than many others.
But this is a philosophical discussion.
You can argue whether in the same logic, whether four years is enough for doing something long term, especially with this modern, very complicated, sophisticated
technologies which require a retuning of sectors of economy and whether four years is enough,
or maybe even two years, because if you lose midterm elections, the Congress would not
allow you to deliver.
I don't know.
I think the answer is let each nation choose its destiny, its future.
It will be exactly in line with the United Nations Charter,
which says sovereign equality of states,
no interference.
One example, Afghanistan.
The democratic experiment failed completely.
And it totally ignored the centuries and centuries old
habits and rules if you wish, unwritten rules of this of this civilization. So we
would be very much cautious regarding any imposition. And Trump is already saying about meeting at three,
US, China, Russia.
He mentioned that he would like to discuss nuclear weapons,
security issues.
We would be open to any format which is based on mutual respect, on
equality, no prejudged solutions.
If our Chinese friends would be interested, it would be their decision.
But this does not negate the importance of Russia-U.S. dialogue on strategic stability.
And the interest in resuming such discussions
was expressed repeatedly by Trump and his people.
Putin, in response, said that it is the area where we have special responsibility,
especially since in one year the START III treaty would be expiring. So it's a very different approach from the Biden, than Biden administration used to promote.
They were saying, let's resume the implementation of the START treaty and let us visit some
of your nuclear sites. We told them, guys, you declared us enemy,
you declared the goal to inflict strategic defeat on Russia.
They said, yes, but this does not preclude
some tactical and technical visits.
Trump's position, as I said at the very beginning, is that whatever differences we have, don't
allow them to degenerate into a war.
And whatever interests come the same way, don't waste the chance to develop this into some practical and useful.
Yes, so it seems that Marco Rubio said it himself, we're walking into a multipolar world.
And you said, you know, the Chinese and to an extent the Russians as well, you always
look at the horizon and ignore short-term developments.
So in the horizon, do you think, I know I'm getting ahead of myself – but
do you think there's a possibility of, in the next, let's say, 10 years, of not only
normalization of relations between Russia and the U.S., but back to an alliance between
the two countries in the next 10 years?
That's something already people are talking about.
The alliance means, at least historically, and this is deeply in our mentality, means a lie against somebody.
Multi-polarity which Marco Rubio recognized is different.
How can you recognize multi-polarity
without recognizing such giant as China,
such giant as China, such giant as India.
Africa is a continent, and Latin America, Brazil, and quite a number of others.
Multi-polarity, in my view, would be evolving for quite some time.
It's historic epoch probably.
And it would, that's my vision.
It could be composed of superpowers by the size,
by the economic weight, by the military might, especially nuclear, and certainly
U.S., China, Russia fit into this category.
Those who are not as big, they can participate in a multipolar world through their subregional structures.
ASEAN, for example, GCC Gulf Cooperation Council, League of Arab States.
And African Union, by the way, received the status of full member of G20 last year.
League of Arab States wants the same.
We are in favor.
G20, by the way, is the format which is now proving to be not only financially and economically useful, but also politically.
It might play a very positive role but the rule of consensus is there.
They don't vote.
Therefore, they are more promising than the United Nations General Assembly, who every
now and then, whenever somebody cannot get something from the Security Council they go to the General Assembly and they
stage a show with votes with
accusations
and so on and so forth
but
Not only Marco Rubio
Not only Marco Rubio spoke about multi-polarity. Donald Trump spoke about NATO, as I referred to his statements, repeated statements, that
this was one of the reasons.
And we insist that any approach, any attempt to approach the Ukrainian crisis, any initiative, and most of them are
very vague, should concentrate on the root causes of the conflict.
And Donald Trump confirmed that one of the root causes was NATO expansion, which created
a threat to the Russian security.
I, by the way, would like to emphasize in this new circumstances after the January 20, that the importance of Ukraine for the Russian security is many, many, many
times bigger than the importance of Greenland for the U.S. security.
And the second issue about root causes, I also referred to the extermination of the Russian
language, media, culture, prohibition of opposition parties, prohibition of some opposition media
even published in Ukrainian language and operating in Ukrainian language.
Murder and disappearance of journalists.
Not to mention the military crimes, war crimes against the people in Donbas immediately after
the coup when they call them terrorists. And all this grossly violates the UN Charter, which says everybody must respect human rights
of every person, irrespective of race, gender, language or religion.
It's on top.
It's Article 1 of the UN Charter.
I've been calling upon the Secretary General of the United Nations, and I was challenging
the journalists in the United Nations.
Whenever I visit, I have a press conference.
By the way, I also challenged those journalists on quite a number of things which were used
by the West to condemn Russia like the worst criminal, starting with, I don't even remember starting with what, downing of Malaysian was held with only one witness being present in person.
12 other witnesses were not presented,
their names are not known,
but the jury said that they are reliable
and they confirmed the suspicion.
So it is still very murky.
The case of Salisbury poisoning, Scrippals, official notes to the United Kingdom authorities about asking questions about the fate and the whereabouts
of Russian citizens, totally ignored.
They raised hell, they accused us, they used this to increase sanctions, and then they
forgot about this. The same is true about Alexei Navalny,
who died in prison serving his term,
but who was a couple of years before that, who was treated.
After alleged poisoning in Russia.
He was taken in less than 24 hours to Germany, and he was treated in Germany.
It's an interesting story.
The Germans, we were asking questions.
He's our citizen, and we wanted to know the truth, what happened to him.
They said that the civilian hospital did not find anything and he was
treated in the military hospital of Bundeswehr. Where, they told us, they found Novichok, this substance in his blood. We asked to see the test. It's only natural. He's our citizen.
We are being accused of maltreating him. They said, no, we are not giving this to you because
you might find out what level of expertise we have in biological substances. And we are
find out what level of expertise we have in biological substances. And we are giving this to the Organization on Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
We went to this organization and said, look, you are our common entity, and the Germans
said that it is now your property. They told us, yes, they gave it to us,
but on the condition that we would not show it to you.
It's childish, but it is tragic at the same time.
And repeatedly, publicly, I asked many Western journalists,
why don't you, being a journalist, you want to know the truth, right?
And a person who was made a martyr by the West against the Russian Federation, evil,
you don't want to know what happened actually to him and how he was treated and
with what was he treated in Germany before he came back to Russia.
And the last one, Buccia, two days after as a goodwill gesture for the sake of signing the Istanbul deal in April 2022.
We withdrew from a couple of villages
in the outskirts of Kiev.
And two days after we left this place, Buccia,
they, not they, BBC team broadcast the main street
Not they, BBC team broadcast the main street with corpses neatly laid along the route on both sides.
We still, and of course there was an outcry, we insisted on investigation, nobody cared
about investigation. Until now, we want to get the names of the people, just the names of the people whose
bodies were shown by BBC.
I raised this issue twice publicly in the Security Council in front of the Secretary
General.
I raised it with him. We sent a formal request to the human rights,
to the High Commissioner on Human Rights
of the United Nations.
No response.
And twice I raised the issue in New York
in front of all foreign correspondents,
just appealing to their professional drive to no avail.
And speaking on human rights and on the sincerity of our Western friends, Europe and the UK,
they certainly want this to continue.
The way they received Zelensky in London after the scandal in Washington, it's an indication
that they want to raise the stakes and they are preparing something to pressure Trump administration back into
some aggressive action against Russia. We are philosophical about this, we know
what we are doing, but I am mostly amazed with this peacekeepers obsession. Peacekeepers, let's stop.
Macron says let's stop in one month,
peacekeepers would be deployed.
Then we'll see what to do next.
It is first, it is not what we say is required
for the end of this war, which the West waged against us through
Ukrainians with their direct participation of the military.
We know this.
If NATO expansion is recognized, at least by Donald Trump, as one of the root causes.
Then the presence of the troops from NATO countries under any flag, in any capacity
on Ukrainian soil is the same threat.
So you won't accept it under any conditions?
Under any conditions?
Well, nobody is talking to us.
They keep saying nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine, but they do everything about Russia
without Russia.
Planning.
Trump, by the way, when asked about peacekeepers, he said, well, it's too early to discuss this,
but normally you need the consent of the parties.
Why should we give consent to the peacekeeping force or peacekeeping group, even, not force,
though they want force, from the composed of the countries who declared
us an enemy.
And they would come as peacekeepers.
And the second thing is the rights and the faith of the people who live not only on the liberated territories, but on the territories under
the control of the regime.
They also, most of them, speak Russian.
They were brought as part of the Russian culture, and they want their kids to know Russian
and to learn Russian.
My question was whether this law or several pieces of law prohibiting Russian language,
whether this would be canceled on the territory which would be left of Ukraine.
There is no answer.
We'll see.
We'll see, we'll see later. And if you'll see later, another question,
whether you would still keep this monument
to Bandera, who collaborated with Hitler
and was accused, convicted by the Nuremberg Tribunal
in absentia, and this monument, for the first time, Israeli ambassador was shown and he said, I never
suspected that this was the case.
He's really a minister.
Minister, minister for the first time.
So the rest of Ukraine would keep this monument and would keep prohibition of Russia, would stage the torchmashes, marshes
with insignia from SS divisions. Then, with all respect, this would be not a group, a
force keeping peace. This would be a group keeping and protecting the Nazi regime.
And this is absolutely non-stat, non-stat.
May I ask you about Gaza?
President Putin has expressed outrage at the genocide in Gaza. What is the, will be the position of the foreign ministry if the Netanyahu regime attacks Iran
as Prime Minister Netanyahu is publicly threatened?
Unfortunately, we had, used to have good relations with President Netanyahu, Putin always underlined,
is underlining when he speaks about this region
that the solution is impossible
without the Palestinian state
and without a reliable security arrangements for Israel.
The two states were created by the decision
of the General Assembly 1948. And the decision, I don't remember the exact
wording, but the decision basically conditioned the creation and existence of
one state against the creation and existence of one state against the creation and existence of
another.
Now everybody who wants a Palestinian state speaks about 1967 borders, which is very different from 1948 borders, which were supposed to be the borders
of Israel and of Palestine.
If you take a look at the map now, 1967 borders is like galaxy compared to what you have.
And the West Bank is all in settlements.
And the latest development, I saw so many reports that Israelis decided to annex in a specific way the West Bank by taking it under total control
without sending Palestinians out, but concentrating them in several municipalities, not in camps,
in municipalities.
Is Iran part of the current negotiations as well?
On?
The peace negotiations when it comes to Ukraine, does that include other issues?
On Ukraine.
On Ukraine.
Yes, as President Putin and President Trump are talking, is it purely about Ukraine or
could it include other geopolitical interests for Russia? No, we discussed the situation in the Persian Gulf.
We discussed the joint comprehensive action program on Iran nuclear issue.
We are in favor of restoring the original program from which the Americans dropped during
the first Trump government.
There are some contacts on the European side.
We would be in favor of resuming the format which developed the original deal endorsed Security Council, which is France, Germany, UK, US, Russia, China, and Iran.
We'll see how it goes.
But what is worrying is that there are some indications that the Americans would like this New Deal to be accompanied by political conditions,
insisting that there should be some verifiable arrangement for Iran not to support groups in Iraq, in Lebanon, in Syria, anywhere, which I don't
think is going to fly.
Look, all countries of this region in the Gulf, all of them have influence beyond the
borders of their kingdoms, emirates, northern Africa.
They undertake quite a number of programs, humanitarian, economic programs.
They mediate a lot.
Sudan, for example, and domestic crisis in Sudan is being handled one way or another
by some players in the Gulf. So to say that everybody has this right to project, to project influence, except Iran,
I don't think it's realistic. Yeah, no. What about President Putin's statement in June 2024 regarding the conditions for a settlement
that even start negotiations with Ukraine?
And my reading of it has been President Putin's position has been the same, your position has been the same as the president's.
It's been also by Vice Minister Rybkov has said it.
And yet I think there are some in the West
that perceive that you don't really mean what you say.
Let them be misguided. You know, our conscious is very clear and clean.
And it is clean not because we use it seldom. It's because we have been burning our fingers
so many times that on this particular crisis,
we know what must be done and that we would not
We know what must be done and that we would not compromise the way which would compromise the fate of the people.
It's not about the territories, it's about the people who were deprived of their history
by law.
When Zelensky was asked in September 21, before the operation, he was asked in an interview
when the war was still going on in violation of the Minsk agreements, he was asked by an
interviewer what he thought about the people on the other side of the line of contact.
And he said, you know, it's still on the internet, you can see it.
You know, there are people and there are species.
And if anybody living in Ukraine feels that he or she is a part of Russian culture, my
advice to you, for the sake of your children, for the future of your grandkids, go to Russia.
Get out of Ukraine.
And this was the man who only few years before that,
while being an actor and then when running for presidency,
he was saying, stop attacking the Russian language.
Let people, he was on record.
attacking the Russian language, led people. He was on record.
And, but the sequence of events
which made us absolutely concentrated
on the achieving the results,
which would be in favor of the people,
which would be saving the people.
Those who speak, well, we have to bring Ukraine
back into 1991 territory, and Russia must get out.
Territories are important only because people live
on these territories, and the people who live
on the territories which he wants back are descendants of those
who for hundreds and hundreds years were building Odessa and other cities on those very lands,
who were building ports, roads, who were founding those lands and who associated with the history
of this land.
By the way, UNESCO announced under huge pressure from Ukraine that the center of Odessa is now the site of world cultural heritage.
It was, which it deserved, but the decision was announced.
One week after the monument to Catherine the Great,
the founder of Odessa, was toppled and thrown away.
the founder of this was toppled and thrown away and UNESCO just went on as if nothing had happened but just brief sequence of events 2004 elections the
two candidates one is considered pro-Russian, another is considered pro-American. He is married to some
American politologist. The second round of elections in 2004, the pro-Russian candidate wins. But the crowd instigated by the Europeans mostly demands reconsideration of these results.
And under huge pressure, the Constitutional Court of Ukraine adopts a decision to hold
a third round, which is not provided for in the Constitution. Constitutional court expanded without any right
the constitutional procedures.
Then the pro-Western candidate wins, Mr. Yushchenko, fine.
There was no Maidan, no revolution, nobody was instigating people to do it.
And then at the next presidential elections, the candidate who was considered pro-Russian,
Mr. Yanukovych, he is winning in a very clean way nobody challenges him.
But then, Mr. Yanukovych, in 2013,
maybe even earlier, but in 2013 it culminated. He started negotiations with the European Union
on getting the association agreement.
And it became known, you cannot hide such a thing.
And our experts started explaining to Ukrainian colleagues
that if you go to the association status
with European Union, you get zero tariffs on many items.
And you have, you Ukraine, have zero tariffs with us, because the Commonwealth of Independent
States has free trade area.
But we have quite a protection in our trade with European Union,
which we negotiated when we were joining W2.
So it might be a situation whereby European goods
from which we negotiated some protection
would be fleeing into Ukraine,
and there is no customs border between Ukraine and Russia.
So we would have to close this border.
Then he said, well, I have to...
We even suggested to the European Commission, who was headed by Jose Manuel Barroso at that
time, Putin proposed to him, let's seat the three of us, EU, Russia, and Ukraine, and see how we can handle these discrepancies,
you know, so that nobody suffers.
He said, none of your business,
we don't discuss Russia-Canadian trade, you know.
You do what you want.
And then Yanukovych asked for postponement of the signature of this association agreement.
Just he said, I want to understand this better. How can we handle it?
This was the trigger for that Maidan.
Well prepared, hundreds of tents of the same make, the same color, the same everything.
And this Maidan culminated in February 2014 when Germany, France, European Commission negotiated between the legitimate president and the opposition.
And that's how it started. Had they, and they reached a deal, which as I said was disrupted
next morning when opposition said we are now the government. Had they delivered on the
said, we are now the government. Had they delivered on the deal which they signed with the help of the Germans, the French,
and the European Commission, Ukraine would be exactly by now where they wanted it to
see, 90-91 borders, including Crimea. They decided to be impatient
because had they waited five months for the elections,
for the early elections, they would have won
because the electorate in Ukraine was very heavily massaged
by USAID.
The figures which are popping up now
and which Trump was reading out in Congress.
Well, they, Victoria Nuland actually said
Well, they, Victoria Nuland actually said after the coup that we did so much for democracy to win on Ukraine, we spent $5 billion.
She said this for this particular revolution.
So then there were Minsk agreements. Had they delivered on the Minsk agreements, they would still have been in
1991 borders minus Crimea, because Crimea was... It was never mentioned during the Minsk
negotiations. Everybody understood that this was a very clean, fair vote of the people.
There were hundreds of Western observers,
not official, but from MPs.
April 2022, Istanbul.
Macron said that Putin tried to impose
something on Zelensky.
It's another lie by Macron.
Because the paper which was initialed by us and Ukrainians
was prepared by Ukrainians.
And we accepted this.
It was very straightforward.
No NATO, no military bases, no military maneuvers.
Instead of NATO, guarantees are provided by Permanent Five,
plus Germany, plus Turkey, and the list is open.
Anybody who would like can join the list of guarantees.
And these guarantees do not cover Crimea and the part of Donbass,
which was controlled by Russia at that time.
And they, they initial, it was their thing.
And these principles were initialed and there was an agreement to develop a treaty, treaty paper on this basis.
Then Boris Johnson said, don't do it, continue to fight,
just like the head of German intelligence now says
that we cannot stop until 2029.
Maybe they want to sit out Donald Trump. So had they had they been cooperative and
had they delivered on their own initiative, they would still have 1991 borders minus Crimea minus some part of Donbass.
Every time, every time they cheat, they lose.
And the process continues.
We don't speak simply through the metronome of the modern era, but I think that's wrong.
They should say that metronome is the last rule.
Thank you very much. that's wrong, they should say that letterless is the last rule. MUSIC