Today´s top level meetings at the D-Day commemorations have shown, once again, that summits matter. Leaders that meet regularly and know each other are in a better position to sort out big issues when a threatening crisis occurs. It is not enough to have the Foreign Ministers around the table. They are, at the end of the day, more radical than their masters. The critical step is to get the political bosses to sit together and talk the issues through.
Showing posts with label G8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label G8. Show all posts
Friday, 6 June 2014
Tuesday, 3 June 2014
G7 in Brussels, a messy affair
Tomorrow
Brussels will be hosting the G7 Summit. This was actually supposed to be a G8
thing. But the relations with the Russians being what they are now, we will only have seven of them in the room. The Russian ghost will however be there as well. That might be the
main phantom. There will some others in the air: the banking and
commercial tensions between Europe and the US, the lacklustre commitment of EU
to collective defence, Syria, North Africa and, in the American minds, the
growing armed instability in the South China Sea. All in all, including from a
traffic perspective, Brussels will be messy.
Labels:
China,
East Asia,
EU,
G7,
G8,
international security,
North Africa,
Russia,
South China Sea,
Syria,
US
Sunday, 16 June 2013
G8 and GZero
On the eve of this year’s G8 meeting, Syria remains the key
issue. It is also a complex and divisive matter, not just because of the
different approaches Russia and the West are following but also on the question
of arms for the opposition. The meeting will come and go and unfortunately we
will see no progress, no agreement on a political roadmap for this deeply
tragic crisis. It is indeed easier to talk about weapons than to device a peace
process.
Labels:
G8,
human rights,
Peace,
peacebuilding,
Russia,
summit,
Syria,
US
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