This
year’s G7 summit will take place at the end of the week in Biarritz, France.
President Macron, the host, has now decided that there will be no final
communiqué at the end of the meeting. He said a communiqué takes a lot of the
participants’ time to be approved and ends up by distracting them from the substantive
discussions. In the end, the final text is bland and means little.
I
agree with him. It is better to spend time on the issues and to make the event
as informal as possible. It is a serious opportunity for exchanges among the
leaders and it should be focused on that. Particularly at a time when we see significant
differences of opinion about key matters. It would be unrealistic to try to get
a consensus during the summit. But it is not unrealistic to debate them and
make one’s points known to the rest of the group.
I
also appreciate the fact that the UN Secretary-General has been invited to
address the meeting and be around for the discussions. His authority must be
re-established. President Macron understands this point.
Still
on who should be in the room, I am against inviting back President Vladimir
Putin. The Russian role in the Ukrainian issue is not resolved. And democracy
is deteriorating in Russia, under the direct supervision of the President.
Those are two strong arguments to keep Putin out. G7 meetings are not for dictators
and autocratic leaders. They have their seat in the G20. Moreover, they can be
engaged through other mechanisms, and there are plenty of them.
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