When the world gets closer.

We help you see farther.

Sign up to our expressly international daily newsletter.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reach your limit of free articles.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Ad-free experience NEW

Exclusive international news coverage

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Monthly Access

30-day free trial, then $2.90 per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch
Geopolitics

​Putin v. The West Began 16 Years Ago In Munich — And Nobody Noticed

The Munich Security Conference of 2023 takes place this weekend. The 2007 edition was a turning point for the world, where Vladimir Putin made his intentions clear — and today it all looks destined to arrive at the invasion of Ukraine.

Photo of Russian President Vladimir Putin giving a speech at the 43rd Annual Conference on Security Policy in Munich on Feb. 10, 2007.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaking at the 43rd Annual Conference on Security Policy in Munich on Feb. 10, 2007.

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

PARIS — The Munich Security Conference, which runs through Sunday, has often been described as the "Davos of Defense," where generals take the stage instead of CEOs. It is also where, 16 years ago, Vladimir Putin made it clear to the world that he would invade Ukraine.

This is obviously an oversimplification. Still, it's worth returning to the Munich Conference of 2007 when the Russian President announced to the West that the post-Soviet party was over.

Stay up-to-date with the latest on the Russia-Ukraine war, with our exclusive international coverage.

Sign up to our free daily newsletter.

Putin delivered a brutal and cutting speech in the German city that was largely overlooked at the time. He had already been in power for seven years, had led the war in Chechnya, and stabilized the situation in Russia after the tumultuous 1990s. By 2007, he was ready to tell the West how he really saw the world.

He launched a scathing critique of the unipolar world, led by the sole superpower at the time, the United States, after the collapse of the Soviet Union. "It is a world of one master, one sovereign," he said.


And for the first time, he denounced NATO's expansion to the East, declaring: "We are legitimately entitled to openly ask against whom this expansion is being carried out."

What's Putin thinking

As observed by Andrei Grachev, a longtime spokesman for Mikhail Gorbachev: "Everyone then considered Putin a lame duck. His speech in Munich was not taken too seriously."

Grachev, who is no fan of Putin's, returned to that fateful speech in his recent book The World Will Never Be The Same Again.: "Few participants that day understood that it was not the voice of a man of the past, nostalgic for a bygone era, but the cry of a new version of Putin 2.0 threatening a new war."

The following year, the war broke out in Georgia.

The pragmatist became an ideologue.

For almost a year now, since he made the fateful decision to invade Ukraine, everyone has been asking "what is in Vladimir Putin's head?" And in parallel, we wonder how the Russian population reacts.

Grachev writes that Putin chose to respond to the Russian people's distress in facing the Soviet collapse by "mobilizing the people behind their leader in the fight for the restoration of historical justice and the deserved greatness of the country."

"Becoming official," he adds, "this ideology was the origin of a radical turning point in Putin's domestic policy towards a confrontation with the West. The pragmatist thus became an ideologue."

Strategic error

Grachev does not spare the West, which he says was guilty of arrogance towards Russia at the time of the collapse of the communist bloc, and its true "strategic error" in refusing to create a collective security structure integrating Russia.

The resolute West has now understood Putin's message.

But he explains well how Putin's transformation is above all a matter of power, how he aims to put the country and the world in a state of permanent tension, as a kind of system rather than an instrument to use when needed.

This framework makes sense as the war in Ukraine drags into a long war. In the absence of any Russian representative this year, the Munich Conference will not have time to reconsider missed opportunities before and after 2007. Yet the West stands resolute, having now understood that Putin wants confrontation.

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Geopolitics

The Rise Of China Does Nothing To Fix What's Wrong With The West

The West and its brand of modernity may be waning in favor of an ascendant China, but is it offering anything besides replacing market forces with brute force.

A pedestrian walks past the American luxury jewellery company Tiffany & Co store in Hong Kong.

A woman walks past the Tiffany & Co store in Hong Kong.

Juan Manuel Ospina

-Analysis-

BOGOTÁ — It's a bedlam out there. We can feel around us the dissolution of all that seemed, just yesterday, so solid and permanent.

Some say the West is in decline, in a process that began in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the United States burst onto the stage before compounding its power after 1945. It put an end to the last days of Europe's imperial splendor.

Observing events today, we may feel that the American years were in fact the West's last, magnificent chapter, and the East is regaining a long-lost supremacy, reshaped this time by communist China.

The American Way of Life, as that shallow version of Western civilization is called, barely had time to mature and define itself. It simply appeared as the rule of materialism and economic power, with a motto to chase money at any cost, even at the expense of living a life.

Keep reading...Show less

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reach your limit of free articles.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Ad-free experience NEW

Exclusive international news coverage

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Monthly Access

30-day free trial, then $2.90 per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch

The latest