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Munich Security Conference: The West is talking to itself

Status: 02/18/2022 05:37 a.m



Talking about Russia, but not with Russia – that could be the motto of the security conference. For the first time in decades, Moscow is not sending an official delegation. The West is solely concerned with the Ukraine crisis.

Against the background of the massive tensions in the Ukraine crisis, the Munich Security Conference begins today. Among the most prominent speakers over the next three days will be Chancellor Olaf Scholz, US Vice President Kamala Harris and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Russia, on the other hand, is not present with an official delegation for the first time in more than 30 years.

Before the world’s most important meeting of experts on security policy, the security situation in Europe had not been as precarious as it was this time. The signs of relaxation that Chancellor Scholz heard on Tuesday during his inaugural visit to Moscow seem to have long since evaporated. Fears of a Russian attack on Ukraine are growing again.

Beginning of the security conference in Munich

Eckhart Querner, BR, Morgenmagazin, February 18, 2022

US Secretary of State Blinken expected today

Russia says it is withdrawing some of its troops from the Ukrainian border. At the same time, however, US President Joe Biden warns of an invasion “in the next few days”. And US Secretary of State Antony Blinken explains to the UN Security Council how a pretext for an attack could be constructed. “This could be a violent event that Russia will bring against Ukraine, or an outrageous accusation that Russia will level against the Ukrainian government,” he says.

Blinken is expected in Munich today and will be sitting on the stage with Federal Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock in the Bayerischer Hof conference hotel to talk about the Ukraine crisis. Scholz, Selenskyj and Harris will have the floor tomorrow. In addition, the foreign ministers of the leading democratic economic powers will then agree on how to proceed. Germany chairs this Group of Seven (G7), which also includes the USA, Great Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan.

Regular Lavrov stays at home

The West is largely on its own when it comes to Ukraine in Munich. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and the heads of the EU are also expected in the Bavarian capital. Russia, on the other hand, is left out. “We regret to say that the conference has increasingly turned into a transatlantic forum in recent years,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova explained the cancellation. The expert meeting has lost its objectivity and the integration of other perspectives.

In recent years, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has been one of the most loyal guests of conference leader Wolfgang Ischinger. It is true that Lavrov still emphasizes daily his willingness to talk to the USA, NATO and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) about a new coexistence on the continent. However, this is now mainly done in writing.

Russia remembers Putin’s “shock speech”

With a view to the conference, Russia is currently also commemorating the 15th anniversary of Kremlin boss Vladimir Putin’s “shock speech” in Munich in 2007. Even then – long before the Ukraine conflict – the Russian President complained to NATO and US representatives about the uncontrolled expansion of the western alliance to Russia’s borders. And he accused the United States of forming a power center that acts without control.

The expansion of NATO did not lead to more security in the world, but to more deaths, Putin said in February 2007. “In any incident, there will be bombing and shooting.” This policy was doomed to fail. Russia’s state media also use the pictures of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan last year – and comment that Putin predicted that.

Around 30 heads of state and government in Munich

In addition to the Ukraine crisis, other topics will also be discussed in Munich. But even the really big issues of this time, such as climate change, digitization and the system competition between democracy and autocracy, will probably recede into the background in view of the acute threat to peace in Europe.

The conference will be opened by UN Secretary-General António Guterres (1.30 p.m.). A total of 30 heads of state and government are taking part in the world’s most important meeting of experts on security policy, as well as more than 80 ministers.

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