Lavrov: U.S. Position of Strength Doomed to Failure
MOSCOW (Dispatches) -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says any U.S. bid to hold talks with Moscow from “a position of strength” is doomed to failure and that Russia will respond harshly to any unfriendly step taken by the United States.
“Attempts to talk with us from a position of strength are doomed to failure from the beginning. We will respond harshly and decisively to unfriendly actions. One should interact honestly if Washington really wants stable and predictable, as they put it, relations,” Lavrov told the Indonesian Rakyat Merdeka newspaper when asked about the future of Moscow-Washington ties after a summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his American counterpart, Joe Biden, in Geneva last month.
Lavrov said that, immediately after the summit, U.S. officials resumed their aggressive rhetoric toward Russia and continued to exert new pressure on Moscow if it failed to accept “the rules of the game” outlined in Geneva.
In the interview, which was published on Monday ahead of Lavrov’s visit to Jakarta, the Russian foreign minister described the summit as “frank and businesslike,” but stressed that Moscow had no illusions about its relations with Washington which, he said, must be based on mutual respect.
“We are satisfied that the sides, which made principled statements, showed a wish to understand each other. It should be considered that the key outcome is a modest but still a step forward toward restoring normal relations between our countries, which as we are strongly convinced, are impossible without mutual respect and taking into account each other’s interests,” he said.
Diplomatic relations between Russia and the United States deteriorated in March when Biden said he believed Putin was a “killer.” Moscow recalled its ambassador from Washington shortly afterwards.
More recently, tensions escalated over the Russian-speaking Donbass region of Ukraine, where Ukrainian troops and ethnic Russians have been fighting since 2014.
Even the Putin-Biden summit in Geneva last month did not seem to bring about a thaw in relations. Only days after the meeting, U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the United States was preparing “another package of sanctions” on Russia over the recent jailing of Western-backed blogger Alexei Navalny.
Sullivan has also said that Washington would maintain sanctions against Russian companies involved in the construction of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany, which Biden needs to confirm every 90 days.