If the West decides to sanction Russia by boycotting the G8 summit in
Sochi, this gathering of the world’s major players will not become a G7,
but will simply disappear, and Russia will not see it as a blow,
because it considers Ukraine as more important than G8, Vladimir
Chizhov, Russia’s ambassador to the EU, told EurActiv in an exclusive
interview.
Ukraine: Chizhov: For Russia Ukraine is more important than G8 | EurActiv
Vladimir Chizhov is a career diplomat. Before being
appointed ambassador to the EU in 2005 he was deputy minister of foreign
affairs. He spoke to EurActiv's senior editor Georgi Gotev yesterday (4
March).
Russian President Putin gave today a wide-ranging press conference on the situation around Ukraine. Perhaps we could go into details of things he said. Let’s start with the sanctions which the EU may adopt against Russia. President Putin said that sanctions could hit back at those who impose them, and warned that they should “think about it”. Is this some sort of threat?
Of course it’s not a threat, rather a piece of friendly
advice. If we speak about trade and economic ties, it’s always a two-way
street. And partners that are so closely interlinked and interdependent
as Russia and the EU, certainly rely on each other on many issues. Our
trade turnover, I’ll give a very simple figure, is one billion euros a
day. And that is a figure that is worth considering before taking any
restrictive measures.
On certain possible measures that were announced at the
[EU] Foreign Affairs Council yesterday, they do not appear to be overly
impressive. I would even add that they are more restrained than the
political rhetoric that surrounded them.
You refer to freezing the visa dialogue? As Russians have not got a visa free regime, such a freeze means nothing, is this what you mean?
Yes, because the process is already frozen by the EU.
Because it’s not going anywhere. On the new [basic bilateral] agreement
there is a similar situation. The ball is squarely in the EU court.
Before the last [EU-Russia] summit we had in January we suggested that
we should re-invigorate the process, and use the summit to provide
political impetus to those negotiations, but the EU chose to postpone it
to the next summit in June. So we’ll see what the European Council
comes out with on Thursday.
But what if G8 becomes G7? Wouldn’t this be a blow to Russia?
Well, the G8 will not become G7, it would fade away and
fizzle out. Because actually it’s been overtaken to a great extent by
the G20, as far as economic issues are concerned. On the political side:
you know, chairing the G8 is not a privilege, it’s not a gift given to
Russia. It’s a huge burden of responsibility.
And every presidency of
the G8 has to organise hundreds of meetings, apart from the summit. If
there is a pause in that work, that would only increase the tension
in further work on preparing the summit and beyond. And you know, for
Russia, I will tell you my personal view, what happens in Ukraine is
more important than what happens with the G8 summit.
Ukraine is important, but we see a dialogue of
the deaf between the EU and Russia in terms of qualifying the political
events in this country. The EU sees what happened there as a democratic
revolution, while President Putin calls it… A coup d’état.
Ukraine: Chizhov: For Russia Ukraine is more important than G8 | EurActiv
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