A very special G7 summit
Victor Ângelo
The
G7 summit number 47 starts today in the UK. Although the British Prime Minister
will be the host, the biggest star will be Joe Biden, who chose the occasion to
make his first trip abroad. He will spend a long week in Europe, thus showing
that the European continent remains an important stage for diplomacy and the
strengthening of American foreign alliances.
This
has everything to be an outstanding summit.
The statements made in the last few days confirm the concerns that I
have already expressed here in this newspaper a month ago, at the time of the
preparatory meeting of the foreign ministers. Biden's intention seems to be to
transform the G7 into what the UN Security Council cannot be: a platform for
understanding between the great liberal democracies, able to give a coordinated
response to universal issues and to face up to China's global ambitions and the
threats posed by Russia. In essence, it is about seeking to safeguard American
hegemony, not in an isolated way as Donald Trump advocated, but with the USA's
most solid allies.
To
make this alliance more effective, they associate South Africa, Australia,
South Korea, and India to the group. This addition is strange and incomplete.
It leaves out many important states. It is true that this is not the time for vast
face-to-face meetings. It is also true
that the decision on who comes to sit at the table is up to the host. But the
other members would also have a say in the matter. Nobody insisted that Mexico,
Brazil, or others be invited. The reading that can be made leaves little doubt:
Latin America is in crisis and counts for little more than nothing on the
international stage. It is, in any case, in the North American sphere of
influence. It would not need to be heard.
Africa
was represented at previous summits by three or four countries. This time it
was almost left out. The presence of Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African
president, can be seen as the British lending a hand to maintaining stability
in South Africa in order to reassure certain sections of its population. The
rest of the continent is of lesser concern. Incidentally, the UK was the only
G7 country that decided to cut its cooperation budget on the pretext of the
pandemic. The cut is £4 billion. It will have a considerable negative impact at
a time when the least developed countries need exceptional support.
Regarding
the Middle East, nobody wants to hear anything about Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, the
general in charge in Egypt, let alone about Recep Erdoğan or Mohammed bin
Salman. From the perspective of the G7, the Middle East is losing strategic relevance.
On the other hand, Iran has moved into China's orbit - on 27 March, a mutual
cooperation agreement for the next 25 years was signed, thus opening a way out
for the Iranians, who have become freer from American and Western sanctions.
In
Asia, the big bet is centred on India. It is, however, a complex and risky
gamble. Narendra Modi is a radical Hindu nationalist who is dragging the
world's largest democracy into an intense civil crisis. He is also a protectionist,
unwilling to open the economy to foreigners. He does, however, offer one
illusion: that he could become an important counterweight to China.
China
is, moreover, the main concern that Biden has in his baggage. He wants to turn
the G7 into a dam against Chinese expansionism. We will see if he succeeds,
apart from the mention in the final communiqué. As for Boris Johnson, the
banner that would allow him to present the meeting as a success would be a
resounding declaration of support for vaccination campaigns in the poorest
countries, so as to have 60% of these populations vaccinated by the end of
2022. If there is a commitment to that, then this G7 will have been useful.
Leaders will be able to sing victory, even though December 2022 will mean another
year and a half of uncertainties and restrictions. In that perspective, helping
others as quickly as possible is in the vital interests of us all, starting
with the G7.
(Automatic translation of the opinion piece I published today in the
Diário de Notícias, the old and prestigious Lisbon newspaper)
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