Moscow open to talks with the West, not threats – Lavrov

The West has traded rational diplomacy for threats and extortion, the Russian foreign minister said after the BRICS summit

Moscow open to talks with the West, not threats – Lavrov

Moscow open to talks with the West, not threats – Lavrov

Current diplomatic contacts have shown that Washington and its allies lack “common sense,” the Russian foreign minister said

Moscow is always willing to engage in diplomacy but has no patience for threats, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told reporters in South Africa on Thursday. 

During a press conference after the BRICS summit in Johannesburg, Lavrov was asked what needs to happen for Western countries to change their policy and move away from confrontation. 

“We see no glimmers of common sense,” when talking to Western diplomats, Lavrov replied, adding that their approach amounts to “you must, you need to.” 

“We are always open to discussions, but we are not going to answer calls for discussions, which involves boorish ultimatums, extortion, and threats against us,” the Russian foreign minister said. He argued that the West has abandoned meaningful negotiations in favor of belligerent attitudes.

The Westerners themselves say that they must ‘defeat’ Russia on the battlefield and ‘inflict a strategic defeat’ on us. That’s what they have now, instead of common sense. In that case, we shall work not in the field of international law or diplomacy, but on the battlefield.

The minister accused Western countries, including many in the EU, of acting as “obedient agents of Washington” on the world stage, to the detriment of their own citizens and economies.

“I presume that if someone wants to contribute to the search for a settlement, this is done not through a microphone, but through the appropriate channels. Everyone knows this,” he said.

France was a “mediator” in Ukraine in the past, Lavrov noted, pointing to the role of Paris in the 2014-15 Minsk peace accords, endorsed by the UN Security Council – and the admission by former French president Francois Hollande, made last year, that the process was merely intended to buy time to arm Ukraine against Russia.

“Unlike the Kiev regime, which broke off and then banned talks with Russia, we have always been open to a diplomatic solution to the crisis and are ready to respond to proposals that are actually serious,” Zakharova said.

“peace formula,” which Russia has rejected as delusional.

Many Western countries have openly sided with Kiev during its conflict with Moscow, imposing sweeping sanctions on Russia and supplying Ukraine with heavy weapons, including tanks and artillery.