When I first heard the saying βmay you live in interesting timesβ, I thought its meaning was positive. Many years later a colleague at Malaysiaβs national think tank corrected me. It was a Chinese curse, he told me, with the word βinterestingβ serving as a euphemism for confusing, disruptive or contradictory. It certainly seems apt for the period we are in at the moment.
Take the recent G20 summit in South Africa. Despite the fact that US President Donald Trump boycotted the event due to his belief that whites in the country were being persecuted, it appeared to go well. βThe G20 should send a clear message that the world can move on with or without the US,β South Africaβs foreign minister Ronald Lamola said. βWe will mark them absent and continue with the business.β I was not alone in wondering whether this was a sign of a new world order, in which the Brics and the Global South took a greater lead without US participation if necessary.
But then came what may be the very real possibility of the G7 readmitting Russia to become the G8 again, which would be a reversion to the status quo from 1997-2014. At that time, it was still possible for a respected organisation such as the Carnegie Moscow Centre to publish a paper which stated: βAs for Russiaβs presence in the group, it is often useful to have a contrarian who would question the othersβ basic assumptions and offer a wholly different worldview. Ideally, Russia would be even more valuable if it managed to function as a global mediator β belonging to all main groups, but to none exclusively, and seeing its goal in moderating international tension and fostering global understanding.β
Sheikh Khaled arrives in South Africa for G20 summit 00:30
Such a scenario may not seem at all imminent, but sooner or later Russia must be dealt with as an actor in reasonable standing, as the Westβs pushing it away has done no one any good. But if the G20 is forging a new path and the G8 reunifies there is no singular, clear direction.
Russiaβs possible return to the G8 is on the cards because of Mr Trumpβs 28-point peace plan to end the war in Ukraine. Talks are ongoing, and most would surely welcome the carnage stopping. But given that a peace deal that was better for Ukraine than what is currently being discussed may have been available in March 2022, less than a month into the war, what do those who told Kyiv to fight on propose telling the families of the hundreds of thousands who died? What did they die for?
Such issues must be raised because the question of what this cessation of hostilities might actually mean is already being analysed and commentaries about what lessons should be learnt published. Their authors tend to be very confident. Mr Trumpβs plan βundermines the fundamental principle that has prevented major wars in Europe since 1945: borders cannot be changed by force,β wrote Bohdan Nahaylo, chief editor of the Kyiv Post, earlier this week. βBy legitimising Russiaβs territorial seizures, Trump would be dismantling the rules-based international order that has underwritten American prosperity and security for generationsβ.
But is that true? Russia β and some others too β would point to Kosovoβs breaking away from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in the late 1990s in which the assistance of Nato air strikes was crucial. Singaporeβs former foreign minister George Yeo talked about this in an interview a few months ago. Noting that he regularly used to sit next to his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov at regional mee
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