Putin’s predictions from 2007 Munich speech: what did Russia’s president get right? Today marks the start of the Munich Security Conference, an annual gathering of Western defense and security elites looking to hang on to the US unipolar moment for as long as possible. Speaking at the conference in 2007, Vladimir Putin signaled Russia’s desire for greater multipolarity in world affairs. Here are his top points: The unipolar world order that the US and its allies constructed was fundamentally undemocratic, “pernicious not only to all those within this system, but also for the sovereign itself because it destroys itself from within.” Unipolarity is the source of “new human tragedies,” including devastating wars and regional conflicts, Putin said, pointing to an almost unrestrained “hyper use of military force” in international relations, with the US in particular “overstepping” its national borders in every conceivable way. Putin pointed to the rise of new centers of power in the forms of the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China). The Russian president highlighted the threat of a global arms race and the militarization of outer space. Putin criticized US proposals for missile defense in Europe, seeing through Washington’s claim that these systems were intended to defend against North Korean missiles, suggesting that for the DPRK to launch nukes at the US through Europe would be “like using the right hand to reach the left ear.” Putin bashed NATO for refusing to ratify the 1999 Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, and criticized the alliance for putting “frontline forces on our borders,” even as Russia continued to “strictly fulfill the treaty obligations and not react to these actions at all.” Subscribe to [club80289214|@SputnikInt] Источник: Sputnik International
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