SVG
Commentary
World Politics Review

Russia and the West's Diverging World Views on Display at Munich

Senior Fellow and Director, Center for Political-Military Analysis

Last weekend’s Munich Security Conference vividly illustrated the conflict in both vision and values between Russia and the West. The Russian delegation, headed by Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, pushed a narrative of Western triumphalism, Russian victimization and the likelihood of further confrontation unless the West satisfied Russian grievances. The American and European leaders at Munich, despite their differences in emphasis and tone as well as over the question of supplying arms to Ukraine, were united in challenging this narrative, portraying a Russia that is clearly violating international norms.

Lavrov made by many Western speakers at the conference that Russian actions in Ukraine had undermined the global order. He joined Russian parliamentarians and security analysts in depicting Moscow’s annexation of the Crimea as a liberation of ethnic Russians fearing repression by a new fascist-linked government in Kiev. They also described the pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine as having similar legitimate apprehensions, though all the Russian presentations at Munich downplayed Moscow’s military support for the insurgents. ...