Russia’s war in Ukraine to overshadow G-20 talks in Bali
Foreign
ministers from the Group of 20 leading rich and developing nations are
gathering in Indonesia’s resort island of Bali for talks bound to be dominated
by the conflict in Ukraine despite an agenda focused on global cooperation and
food and energy security.
The
one-day gathering will take place on Friday on the mostly Hindu “island of the
gods” in the majority Muslim archipelago nation.
Underscoring
the backdrop of tensions hanging over the meeting, Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi and Russia’s top diplomat Sergey Lavrov stopped in various Asian
capitals on their way to Bali, drumming up support and fortifying their ties in
the region ahead of the talks.
The
United States and its allies have sought to punish Russian President Vladimir
Putin in as many ways as possible, including by threatening a boycott of the
G-20′s Bali summit in November unless Putin is removed from the forum.
So
as this year’s president of the G-20, Indonesia has been forced into playing a
more constructive role on the world stage rather than acting just as an “event
organizer.” The country has sought to remain neutral in dealing with Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine and President Joko Widodo has been guarded in his comments.
Widodo
was the first Asian leader to visit the warring countries. Ukraine is not a
member of G-20, but Widodo has invited Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
to the November summit along with Putin, hoping to appease all sides and limit
any distractions from the forum’s agenda.
Zelenskyy
has said he won’t attend if the war is continuing then and has opted to follow
the discussions by video link. Widodo reportedly told Italian Prime Minister
Marion Draghi, on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit in Germany, that
Putin also will not be coming. Moscow has said a decision has not yet been
made.
That
apparent compromise may be put to the test when the G-20 foreign ministers
gather in Bali’s heavily-guarded Nusa Dua tourist haven to lay the groundwork
for the 17th summit of the West’s economic powerhouses.
Strains
between Washington and Beijing are also apparent: On Wednesday, China launched
a scathing attack on the U.S. and NATO, just days before U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken and the Chinese foreign minister are due to meet in Bali.
Washington
“observes international rules only as it sees fit,” Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing. He said the “so-called
rules-based international order is actually a family rule made by a handful of
countries to serve the U.S. self-interest.”
A
senior U.S. official, speaking on condition he not be further identified, said
it would be important to focus on the G-20 agenda in Bali, but that it “clearly
cannot be business as usual.”
What
is more important than a unanimous statement about the Russian invasion of
Ukraine is what countries in the G-20 actually do to address the problems the
world is facing now, he said.
A
key aim of the talks will be to seek ways to improve food security at a time
when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has choked global markets, pushing prices of
meat, dairy products, cereals, sugar and vegetable oils sharply higher.
“These visits are not only important for
Indonesians but also for other developing countries in order to prevent the
people of developing and low-income countries from falling into extreme poverty
and hunger,” Widodo told reporters in Jakarta before his departure to Germany
on June 26.
Russia
and Ukraine account for a third of the world’s wheat exports and Ukraine alone
grows enough of the grain to feed 400 million people. But Moscow’s blockade
means Kyiv can only move 2 million tons a month, 60% less than usual.
Millions
of tons of Ukrainian grain are sitting in silos waiting to be shipped through
safe corridors in the Black Sea. Ukraine also is one of the world’s largest
exporters of corn and sunflower oil, but Russia’s invasion halted most of that
flow. Such disruptions threaten food supplies for many developing countries,
especially in Africa.
Foreign
ministers headed to Bali on Thursday come from Argentina, Australia, Brazil,
Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia,
South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the U.S., and the
European Union.
Blinken
is scheduled to meet with Wang, Beijing’s top envoy, on Saturday. The meeting
will be the latest high-level contact between U.S. and Chinese officials as
Washington has questioned China’s stance after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The
two sides could also discuss a possible lifting of U.S. tariffs on imports from
China by President Joe Biden’s administration as it strives to counter
inflation.
While
in Bali, Lavrov is to hold meetings with his counterparts from other countries,
including China, Mexico, South Africa and Brazil on the sidelines of the G-20
foreign ministers.
In
talks on Thursday, Lavrov informed Chinese Foreign Minister Wang about “the
course of fulfilling the main tasks of the Russian special military operation,”
the term Moscow uses for its invasion of Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry
said.
It
said the ministers “shared their assessment of the actions taken by the West in
the context of the situation in Ukraine.”
“Both
parties emphasized that it’s inadmissible to introduce unlawful unilateral
sanctions bypassing the United Nations,” the ministry said.
German
Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said it is important to show that the world
does not accept the invasion of a smaller country by a more powerful neighbor.
“If we were to allow that as an international
community, then no smaller country would be able to sleep peacefully at all,”
she said after arriving in Indonesia. “That is why it is not only a question
for us as Europeans how we deal with this brutal war of aggression, but it is
also the defense of international law, it is the protection of smaller,
medium-sized countries..”
Members
of the G-20 account for about 80% of the world’s economic output, two-thirds of
the world’s population and about three-quarters of global trade.