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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

The G20's Futility On Ukraine Is Even Worse Than It Seems

It's not just about the current diplomatic impasse between Russia and the West, it's about the future — and that means China.

photo of Blinken reaching out to shake hands with Lavrov

Blinken and Lavrov on Thursday in New Delhi in photo released by Russian state agency TASS

Sergei Bobylev/TASS via ZUMA
Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

Ten minutes: that was how long the Blinken-Lavrov meeting lasted. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov were both in New Delhi for the Foreign Ministers meeting of the G20, the group of the world's leading economies.

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It was their first meeting since the war in Ukraine began a year ago — and it was brief, to say the least.

The Russian spokeswoman even made it clear that there were "no meetings or negotiations" during this brief gathering, which was initiated by the U.S.

This non-dialogue is similar to what happened at the G20 meeting, more generally. This is among the only forums where Western, Russian and Chinese officials meet.

It was at the G20 Summit in Bali in November that U.S President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping renewed their dialogue. Russian President Vladimir Putin did not attend.

Thursday in Delhi, the climate was even icier.


And it was all to the dismay of the Indian presidency of the G20, which was counting on its non-aligned attitude regarding the war in Ukraine to help create some diplomatic movement.

In Delhi, agreeing on a joint statement on the war seemed out of the question: the Russians and the Chinese went their separate ways, preventing any consensus, however weak.

Chinese contradictions

This only confirms that this is not yet the time for diplomacy, despite recent announcements hinting at the opposite, in particular the famous Chinese plan that has set off rivers of ink flowing.

China is in a fully contractionary position. It tries to appear as a responsible great power that seeks to ease tensions. It publishes its 12-point plan, and calls for a ceasefire with Moscow's ally, the Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko.

But at the same time, Beijing blocks every statement of any significance at the G20, and sticks permanently to the anti-American discourse shared with the Kremlin.

This is all the more contradictory as it often presents itself as the spokesperson, or even the natural leader of the "Global South," the name given to countries that refuse to align themselves with either camp in Ukraine.

Photo of \u200bLavrov and India's Minister of External Affairs Subrahmanyam Jaishankar

Lavrov and India's Minister of External Affairs Subrahmanyam Jaishankar

Russian Foreign Ministry Press S/TASS via ZUMA

U.S. intel transparency


And there is also now the suspicion of impending Chinese arms supplies to Russia, a major issue right now. The U.S. revealed that Beijing was considering supplying Russia with "lethal" equipment — as opposed to computer or logistical equipment. Beijing denied this, but the accusations continued this week with a statement from CIA Director William Burns.

Washington wants to dissuade the Chinese from crossing the rubicon.

One wonders why the Americans are being so transparent in their intelligence, much as they had rightly announced in advance the plans for a Russian invasion of Ukraine. Like last year, this could be an attempt at deterrence, accompanied by the implicit threat of sanctions.

There is a decisive moment in this tug of war, because if China starts to deliver war material (we are talking about drones at first), it could tip the balance of power. Washington wants to dissuade the Chinese from crossing the rubicon: the failure of the G20 meeting is from this point of view a bad omen.


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food / travel

Squash That Vegan Cannelloni! The Politics Of Going Meat-Free Is Hotter Than Ever

A German politician got a taste for the backlash that can come from getting close to the vegetarian movement, especially as environmental factors make the choice even more loaded than at its birth in the animal rights movement.

Image of a person holding a colorful veggie burger.

A veggie burger in all its glory

Yannick Champion-Osselin

PARISEating meat-free can sometimes come with consequences. Just ask German center-right politician Silke Gorissen, who has been in full damage-control mode since participating at a seemingly ordinary vegan-vegetarian awareness event last month at the University of Bonn.

Gorissen, who serves as the Minister of Agriculture for North Rhine-Westphalia state, made the usual rounds at the veggie event, offering typical politician praise for the local fruit and vegetable products. And then she tasted the vegan cannelloni…

Indeed, it was the Minister’s public praise for the meatless take on the classic Italian stuffed pasta recipe (traditionally served with ground beef or pork) that set off an uproar — a reminder that the debate over vegetarian diets can still be explosive.

German daily Die Welt reported that rumors followed the University event that the government was about to declare a meat-free month for the state — rather than just the student dining hall. In the heartland of German pig farming, it makes sense that the local farmers oppose anti-meat initiatives that could affect their livelihoods.

Still, there is something about vegetarianism that goes beyond simple economics.

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