War in Ukraine -- and What It Means for the World Order | Ian Bremmer | TED

1,667,041 views ・ 2022-03-11

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:03
Bruno Giussani: It's difficult to think clearly
0
3820
2200
00:06
of the Russian invasion of Ukraine,
1
6020
1920
00:07
because wars, while they unfold,
2
7980
2120
00:10
they're kind of shrouded in a sort of fog.
3
10100
2360
00:12
Information is abundant:
4
12500
2080
00:14
the millions of refugees,
5
14580
1480
00:16
the shocking suffering and the destruction, the politics.
6
16100
4400
00:20
But sense is lacking.
7
20500
2600
00:23
And that's going to be the focus of this Membership conversation
8
23140
3400
00:26
as we enter the third week of the war.
9
26580
2320
00:29
We won’t talk about the events of the day
10
29300
2000
00:31
but try to project a longer arc, a broader context.
11
31340
3680
00:35
Our guest is geopolitical analyst Ian Bremmer.
12
35020
3160
00:38
He's the founder and president of Eurasia Group,
13
38180
2280
00:40
and we asked him to lay the scene
14
40460
1760
00:42
by talking first about the geopolitical shifts
15
42220
2440
00:44
that have already been brought by the war in Ukraine.
16
44700
3920
00:48
And after, we're going to have a conversation,
17
48660
2240
00:50
including questions from TED Members who are participating in this call.
18
50940
4200
00:55
Ian, welcome.
19
55180
1160
00:56
Ian Bremmer: Thank you very much.
20
56700
1600
00:58
I'll start by saying that in my lifetime,
21
58340
5680
01:04
the most important geopolitical artifact is the fall of the Berlin Wall.
22
64060
6160
01:10
I mean, you see it
23
70260
1960
01:12
if you go into the new NATO headquarters in Brussels,
24
72260
2720
01:15
just built a few years ago.
25
75020
2000
01:17
And anyone that has a piece, something they're very proud of,
26
77060
3080
01:20
they know it affected their entire lives.
27
80180
1960
01:22
I think that in 30 years' time,
28
82180
1880
01:24
and I fear that in 30 years' time,
29
84060
1920
01:26
if we look back,
30
86020
1560
01:27
a second most important geopolitical artifact
31
87580
4240
01:31
will be a piece of the rubble of the Maidan in Kyiv.
32
91860
4440
01:38
I believe that the war that we are seeing right now
33
98420
3960
01:42
is no more and no less
34
102420
3120
01:45
than the end of the peace dividend
35
105540
3760
01:49
that we all thought we had
36
109340
3520
01:52
when the wall came down in 1989.
37
112860
2600
01:55
The idea that the world could focus more on globalization
38
115500
3480
01:59
and goods and services and people and ideas
39
119020
2800
02:01
going faster and faster across borders,
40
121860
2640
02:04
leading to unprecedented growth in human development
41
124540
4640
02:09
and a global middle class.
42
129220
1800
02:11
I think that this is a tipping point.
43
131020
2280
02:13
Won't end globalization,
44
133340
2320
02:15
but it does end the peace dividend.
45
135660
3240
02:18
It does mean that the Europeans overnight
46
138940
3800
02:22
will and must prioritize spending on defense policy,
47
142740
6600
02:29
on national security, coordination, on NATO.
48
149380
4320
02:34
And the speech that was given by Olaf Scholz,
49
154340
2560
02:36
the new chancellor, two weeks ago,
50
156940
2080
02:39
in my view, the most significant speech given by a European leader
51
159060
5280
02:44
in the post-Cold War environment,
52
164380
2400
02:46
precisely because it's now the post-post-Cold War environment,
53
166820
5000
02:51
sending weapons to the Ukrainians,
54
171860
3920
02:55
committing to over two percent of GDP spend on defense,
55
175820
5320
03:01
investing in a new fund for defense infrastructure.
56
181180
3760
03:04
But also recognizing that the way
57
184980
1840
03:06
that the Germans and the Europeans as a whole
58
186860
2120
03:08
looked at the world and looked at themselves was,
59
188980
3920
03:12
unfortunately for all of us, outdated.
60
192900
2920
03:15
A few other points I'd like to raise, just to kick off this conversation.
61
195820
5200
03:21
One:
62
201020
1520
03:22
One of the reasons I'm pretty negative about this,
63
202580
2360
03:24
and I'm not usually very negative, I'm usually an existential optimist,
64
204980
3360
03:28
I’m someone that’s just happy there’s water in the glass.
65
208340
2680
03:31
But when I look at this conflict, I’m much more concerned.
66
211060
2720
03:33
And that is because I do not see a scenario,
67
213780
3120
03:36
a plausible scenario, in the foreseeable future
68
216940
3360
03:40
where Putin emerges from this war
69
220300
3000
03:43
in anything less than a radically weakened position
70
223340
4760
03:48
compared to where he was before he announced the invasion.
71
228140
4280
03:52
And I believe that both in terms of his domestic political orientation,
72
232460
3640
03:56
how stable he is in his own country,
73
236140
3080
03:59
also, of course, Russia's economic position,
74
239220
3040
04:02
and finally, Russia's position in terms of global security
75
242300
3760
04:06
and European security:
76
246100
1080
04:07
ostensibly, the very reason that Putin began the war to begin with.
77
247180
4240
04:11
Second big point is that the decoupling that we are seeing from Europe
78
251460
6800
04:18
and the United States with Russia is, in my view, permanent.
79
258300
3400
04:22
And that would be true even if there were a negotiated settlement
80
262420
3920
04:26
and all the Russian troops were to pull out of Ukraine
81
266340
2840
04:29
and we had peace.
82
269220
1560
04:30
I still think that a lot of those companies would not come back
83
270820
4320
04:35
with Putin in power.
84
275140
1720
04:36
I'm convinced that the decisions by the Europeans
85
276900
4320
04:41
to ramp up their national security capabilities will be permanent.
86
281260
3920
04:45
Permanent deployments coming in the Baltic states, for example,
87
285220
3280
04:48
forward deployments in Poland and Bulgaria and Romania.
88
288540
4600
04:53
And also an unwind of Europe’s massive energy dependence:
89
293180
4760
04:57
coal, oil and most importantly, gas
90
297980
3120
05:01
on Russia.
91
301100
1200
05:02
That does not make Russia a global pariah
92
302300
2840
05:05
because you can't be a global pariah
93
305140
2080
05:07
if the soon-to-be most important economy in the world, China,
94
307260
3160
05:10
is actually your bestie on the global stage,
95
310460
2320
05:12
and that indeed continues to be true
96
312780
2320
05:15
despite China's efforts to portray themselves,
97
315140
2440
05:17
towards Europe at least,
98
317620
1360
05:19
as more neutral.
99
319020
2120
05:21
We are going to see the Russians as a supplicant economically,
100
321180
4720
05:25
in terms of energy flows,
101
325940
1440
05:27
financially, in terms of transactions,
102
327420
1880
05:29
and technologically, perhaps most important,
103
329340
2600
05:31
aligned with China.
104
331940
1960
05:33
That has big geopolitical implications long-term.
105
333940
2560
05:36
Also, a lot of other developing economies, like the Indians,
106
336500
4320
05:40
like the Gulf states, like Brazil,
107
340860
2760
05:43
are also not going to work with Russia as a pariah.
108
343620
3480
05:47
They'll continue to engage.
109
347100
1800
05:49
Are there any silver linings?
110
349340
2560
05:51
And I think there are a few.
111
351940
1640
05:53
Of course, there is a much greater renewed purpose and mission of NATO.
112
353620
6920
06:00
I mean, this is an organization that just a couple of years ago,
113
360900
3600
06:04
France President Emmanuel Macron referred to as “brain-dead.”
114
364540
3960
06:08
It was increasingly drifting in terms of its importance.
115
368940
4680
06:13
The Americans were focusing much more on Asia, the pivot.
116
373660
3440
06:17
Not today.
117
377140
1200
06:18
Today, NATO is purposeful,
118
378340
2360
06:20
it's aligned, it's consolidated.
119
380740
2240
06:23
it's going to get more resources, not less.
120
383020
2240
06:25
That's also true of the European Union as a whole,
121
385300
3120
06:28
even when we talk about countries like Hungary and Poland
122
388420
3480
06:31
that have been much less aligned in terms of rule of law,
123
391900
2680
06:34
in terms of an independent judiciary,
124
394620
1760
06:36
much more aligned in terms of the importance
125
396420
2080
06:38
of common values of Europe
126
398500
1280
06:39
compared to that of what we're seeing in Moscow.
127
399780
2520
06:42
I mentioned the German security and policy shift.
128
402300
2680
06:44
The UK-EU relationship is much smoother and more functional
129
404980
4760
06:49
than at any point since Brexit process actually started.
130
409780
4480
06:54
And even the United States.
131
414300
1920
06:56
I mean, if you watched the State of the Union
132
416260
2120
06:58
for a brief moment in time, five or 10 minutes,
133
418380
2200
07:00
when all of the Democrats and Republicans were standing and applauding together,
134
420620
3800
07:04
you could be forgiven for believing that the United States
135
424420
3680
07:08
had a functional representative democracy.
136
428140
3280
07:11
Now I'm not sure how long this is going to last,
137
431420
2240
07:13
but at least as of now,
138
433700
1480
07:15
leaders of the Democratic and Republican Party
139
435180
2680
07:17
see Putin as much more of a threat, an enemy,
140
437900
2960
07:20
than they do their opponents across the aisle in domestic politics.
141
440900
3880
07:24
And two weeks ago, that was not true.
142
444780
2560
07:27
That's significant.
143
447380
1160
07:28
Final silver lining, and I wish it was more of one,
144
448580
3400
07:32
but the Chinese,
145
452020
1560
07:33
as much as they are strategically aligned with Russia
146
453620
3440
07:37
and with the person of President Putin,
147
457100
2760
07:39
they do not want a second Cold War.
148
459860
3160
07:43
And they would rather a negotiated settlement.
149
463060
2320
07:45
They're not willing to push very hard for it.
150
465380
2320
07:47
But they certainly do not see a radical decoupling of the Russian,
151
467700
6440
07:54
and potentially the Chinese economy,
152
474180
2680
07:56
from the rest of the world, from Europe,
153
476900
2280
07:59
from the US, from the advanced industrial democracies,
154
479220
2560
08:01
as in any way in their interest.
155
481780
2280
08:04
And ultimately, that does create at least some buffer,
156
484100
4120
08:08
some guardrail on how much this is likely to escalate as a conflict going forward.
157
488260
6840
08:15
BG: I want to make a step back and unpack some of that,
158
495100
3120
08:18
maybe starting with a question that relates to your last point
159
498260
2920
08:21
and is probably on the mind of many.
160
501220
2200
08:23
And it is:
161
503420
1240
08:24
Is there still some real space for negotiation?
162
504660
2520
08:27
Is there still a potential relationship between Russia and Ukraine?
163
507220
3680
08:31
IB: The foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine just met recently in Turkey.
164
511340
5640
08:37
It was as much of a non-event
165
517620
2560
08:40
as the three preceding negotiations of more junior representatives
166
520180
5200
08:45
of their teams on the Belarus border.
167
525420
2840
08:48
The one thing that has been accomplished to a small degree
168
528300
3560
08:51
has been humanitarian corridors,
169
531860
2320
08:54
extending out of a number of Ukrainian cities
170
534220
4000
08:58
that are being pounded by Russian military.
171
538260
3320
09:01
That's because the Ukrainians are interested in protecting their civilians,
172
541580
4080
09:05
and the Russians are interested in taking a lot of territory
173
545700
3640
09:09
without necessarily having to kill so many Ukrainians,
174
549340
3640
09:13
that could cause problems for them internationally
175
553020
2360
09:15
as well as domestically inside Russia.
176
555380
1840
09:17
But that is nowhere close to a negotiated settlement.
177
557860
4240
09:22
Now, I mean, everyone I know
178
562140
1440
09:23
that's involved in the negotiations right now
179
563620
2440
09:26
responds that the President Putin himself is hell-bent on taking Kyiv
180
566100
5280
09:31
and on removing Zelenskyy from power.
181
571420
3760
09:35
Now I think, and by the way, they're getting quite close
182
575220
2640
09:37
to being able to accomplish that militarily on the ground.
183
577900
3280
09:41
I think within the next couple of weeks, certainly, it looks very likely.
184
581540
3920
09:46
A couple of points here.
185
586020
1200
09:47
One, there is no reason to put any stock in anything
186
587260
3440
09:50
that the Russians are saying publicly in terms of their diplomacy.
187
590700
3440
09:54
They lied to the face of every world leader
188
594180
3080
09:57
about the invasion that they said they were not going to do into Ukraine.
189
597300
4320
10:01
And then just today,
190
601660
1680
10:03
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov publicly said,
191
603380
2680
10:06
well, the Russians didn't attack Ukraine.
192
606100
1960
10:08
I mean, this is Orwellian stuff, right?
193
608060
1960
10:10
So first of all, do not report on Russian public statements
194
610060
4800
10:14
as if they bear any semblance to reality on the ground.
195
614860
4160
10:19
Secondarily, this looks like a huge loss for Putin right now.
196
619620
5320
10:24
He understands it, and I think he would have a hard time,
197
624940
3160
10:28
even with his control of information, spinning this to his public
198
628140
5360
10:33
without removing Zelenskyy,
199
633540
1800
10:35
without the “de-Nazification,” as he calls it --
200
635380
2560
10:37
which is an obscenity in an environment
201
637940
2120
10:40
where the Ukrainian president is actually Jewish --
202
640100
3160
10:43
the disarmament of Ukraine,
203
643300
3800
10:47
and of course, the ability of the Russians
204
647140
3880
10:51
to change how they feel about Ukraine as a threat to the Russian homeland.
205
651020
5040
10:56
BG: What level of support can we give Ukraine militarily,
206
656100
3120
10:59
intel, economic,
207
659220
1640
11:00
before Putin considers taking a strike on a NATO country?
208
660860
4880
11:06
IB: Well, it’s interesting the way you framed that, Bruno.
209
666380
3440
11:09
Because I mean,
210
669860
1160
11:11
I think that Putin is already considering strikes on NATO countries.
211
671020
3800
11:14
I mean, there were massive attacks,
212
674860
2640
11:17
cyberattacks and disinformation attacks,
213
677540
3120
11:20
by Russia against NATO countries with reckless abandon
214
680700
3640
11:24
over the course of the past years.
215
684380
1840
11:26
And in fact, when President Biden met with Putin in Geneva back in June,
216
686260
4920
11:31
it seems like years and years ago at this point,
217
691180
3840
11:35
Biden set the agenda.
218
695020
1440
11:36
Ukraine was largely not discussed,
219
696500
1880
11:38
but what was discussed was cyberattacks on critical infrastructure.
220
698420
3440
11:41
Because you may remember Bruno,
221
701860
1760
11:43
that meeting came right after the cyber attacks
222
703660
3360
11:47
against the Colonial Pipeline.
223
707060
1640
11:48
And the Russians after that indeed pulled back
224
708740
3480
11:52
on supporting those attacks by their criminal cyber syndicates.
225
712260
3520
11:55
I expect those attacks to restart in very short order
226
715820
5040
12:00
against NATO countries.
227
720860
1640
12:02
I also believe that the fact that the West is sending weapons to Ukraine
228
722540
5440
12:07
and is providing real-time intelligence reports
229
727980
3600
12:11
on the disposition of Russian troops on the ground in Ukraine
230
731620
3320
12:14
to better allow the Ukrainians to defend themselves
231
734940
2440
12:17
and blow the Russians up,
232
737380
1440
12:18
that is considered by the Russians to be an act of war,
233
738860
3360
12:22
and they will retaliate.
234
742220
1560
12:24
And how they retaliate is the question.
235
744140
2040
12:26
I don't think they're going to send troops into Poland.
236
746220
2640
12:28
But you know,
237
748900
1160
12:30
when the Americans under Reagan were providing that kind of support
238
750100
5360
12:35
to the mujahideen
239
755500
1600
12:37
to help them defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan,
240
757100
4280
12:41
the Soviets saw that as an act of war,
241
761420
1840
12:43
and they engaged in acts of terrorism against the mujahideen in Pakistan.
242
763260
4400
12:47
And I absolutely think that that is on the table
243
767700
3080
12:50
in terms of front line NATO countries especially,
244
770780
4000
12:54
like Poland, like the Baltic states, like Bulgaria, Romania.
245
774780
3240
12:58
Would that be considered an Article V attack?
246
778060
3480
13:01
Would that force NATO countries to strike the Russians back?
247
781580
4280
13:05
I'm not sure it would.
248
785900
1760
13:07
Not directly, not militarily.
249
787700
1880
13:09
So I mean, I do think that the fact that the NATO countries see
250
789940
4800
13:14
there is some sort of a big red line between sending troops in, for example,
251
794780
6560
13:21
and doing a no-fly zone because that could cause World War III,
252
801380
5440
13:26
but everything short of that is just a proxy war.
253
806860
3640
13:30
The Russians don't see it that way.
254
810500
1680
13:32
And that gives the Russians some advantage tactically
255
812220
3400
13:35
in terms of their willingness to escalate.
256
815620
2680
13:38
BG: You're describing a spiral of escalation here
257
818340
2320
13:40
that will touch the globe and not only Ukraine,
258
820660
2920
13:43
not only the eastern flank of Europe,
259
823620
2320
13:45
which means that not only this war has ripple effects everywhere,
260
825980
3320
13:49
but this is also starting a sort of realignment
261
829340
2200
13:51
of the global geopolitical situation and context.
262
831580
4640
13:56
To me, it has been very striking how Europe and the US
263
836220
4560
14:00
have kind of moved very fast in a cohesive way.
264
840820
4840
14:05
And it has chosen, after years of prioritizing the economics
265
845700
4960
14:10
in their international and global dealings,
266
850700
3160
14:13
it's chosen to put politics over markets.
267
853860
2160
14:16
It has adopted sanctions that will hurt Russia,
268
856020
2680
14:18
but will also hurt Western businesses.
269
858740
2600
14:22
It’s the discussion about decoupling that you put forward before,
270
862180
3320
14:25
an active kind of fencing out of the Russian economy.
271
865500
4960
14:30
Talk to us about how do you see this decoupling playing out.
272
870460
3040
14:34
IB: Yeah, I mean, I do think that for the Europeans,
273
874140
4120
14:38
this is a permanent move.
274
878260
1280
14:39
I mean, I've spoken to top leaders in the German government
275
879580
3320
14:42
who tell me that Nord Stream was a strategic mistake,
276
882900
2800
14:45
and they understand it.
277
885740
1440
14:47
Who say that, you know,
278
887220
1160
14:48
Scholz making this speech from the Social Democratic Party
279
888380
4240
14:52
on the center left
280
892660
1440
14:54
is the equivalent of Nixon going to China.
281
894100
2240
14:56
No one else could have made that move.
282
896380
3000
15:00
But having made it, everyone is on board.
283
900140
3440
15:03
The popularity in Germany,
284
903580
1640
15:05
even given the massive economic consequences,
285
905260
3440
15:08
is extraordinary and is across the board.
286
908740
2400
15:11
And what they need to do now
287
911460
2080
15:13
is ensure that the diversification of fossil fuels in the near term
288
913540
4760
15:18
away from Russia,
289
918340
1400
15:19
towards Qatar and Azerbaijan and even, you know,
290
919780
3800
15:23
sort of the United States for LNG,
291
923620
3000
15:26
can be done as fast as humanly possible.
292
926660
3520
15:30
And that further, even though it’s going to cost a lot,
293
930220
3200
15:33
some of it will be uneconomic,
294
933460
1520
15:35
the move towards renewables actually picks up and is faster.
295
935020
4040
15:39
The Italians, Mario Draghi,
296
939060
2760
15:41
I think his shift in strategic orientation that they will do,
297
941820
5160
15:47
this is his "whatever it takes" moment.
298
947020
1880
15:48
He had that in response to the 2008 financial crisis
299
948900
3960
15:52
as the head of the European Central Bank,
300
952900
1960
15:54
and that made him “Super Mario.”
301
954900
1760
15:56
This is making him Super Mario as the Italian prime minister.
302
956700
3840
16:00
This is the "whatever it takes" moment for the Italians
303
960580
3920
16:04
who never make public statements that undermine their economic,
304
964500
4880
16:09
their commercial interests like this in such a strategic way.
305
969380
4280
16:13
The French, of course, have less to be concerned about
306
973700
3400
16:17
in the sense that most of their energy comes from nuclear power and is domestic.
307
977140
5000
16:22
So they are not as affected directly by a cut-off from Russia.
308
982140
6080
16:28
And also because Macron fancies himself,
309
988260
2680
16:30
especially as the leader of the European Commission this year,
310
990980
4200
16:35
the rotating leadership, occupying the presidency,
311
995180
2600
16:37
but also with his elections coming up,
312
997820
1880
16:39
and just given his personal belief that he can drive diplomacy,
313
999740
4520
16:44
I believe that even after Kyiv falls
314
1004300
3760
16:48
and after Zelenskyy is either killed or forced out
315
1008060
3800
16:51
that the Americans will not want to engage in direct diplomacy,
316
1011900
4600
16:56
the Germans probably won't.
317
1016540
1840
16:58
The French will.
318
1018420
1400
16:59
And by the way, the Chinese will too.
319
1019860
2800
17:02
And I do believe that there is a potential,
320
1022980
2960
17:05
and this is a danger for the cohesiveness of the West,
321
1025940
4200
17:10
that the Chinese and Macron end up being the post-Kyiv Normandy format
322
1030180
6160
17:16
of diplomacy.
323
1036380
1440
17:17
That's something that the Americans and the Germans right now
324
1037820
2920
17:20
are starting to worry about quite a bit.
325
1040740
1960
17:22
Now that's the European shift.
326
1042700
2160
17:24
And I think, as I said, I think it's permanent.
327
1044860
2520
17:27
I believe the UK is in that camp as well.
328
1047420
3480
17:31
I'm not so sure the United States is going to be as committed
329
1051220
4400
17:35
for as long a term.
330
1055660
1120
17:36
It doesn't affect the Americans as much economically,
331
1056820
2520
17:39
it doesn't affect the Americans as much in terms of a direct security issue.
332
1059340
3640
17:43
None of those refugees are coming to the United States.
333
1063020
3240
17:46
But also American inequality,
334
1066260
2560
17:48
American political polarization and dysfunction is so much greater
335
1068820
4800
17:53
than what you experience on the continent in Europe.
336
1073660
2680
17:56
So the potential that in six months' time or in two years' time,
337
1076380
4520
18:00
as we're thinking about the 2024 election,
338
1080940
2400
18:03
that the Americans have largely forgotten about this Russia issue instead,
339
1083380
4000
18:07
are focusing once again on domestic political opponents
340
1087380
3960
18:11
as principal adversaries,
341
1091340
1640
18:13
which deeply undermines NATO,
342
1093020
2400
18:15
much more than anything that would come from the Europeans,
343
1095460
2800
18:18
I think that is a real open question going forward
344
1098300
3760
18:22
that is perhaps as significant as the question of where the Chinese go.
345
1102100
4200
18:26
BG: Let me pick up on the point you made about energy,
346
1106340
2600
18:28
because somehow Putin's calculus can really change
347
1108940
4960
18:33
if Russian oil and gas stops flowing to Europe,
348
1113940
3560
18:37
if it becomes part of the sanctions, right?
349
1117540
2640
18:40
And this war indeed can kind of be read
350
1120180
2320
18:42
as a war about energy.
351
1122500
1480
18:43
Selling energy funds it for Russia,
352
1123980
3360
18:47
being dependent on Russian energy makes the European response more constrained.
353
1127380
5080
18:52
Rising energy insecurity, rising energy cost
354
1132500
3720
18:56
may or probably will destabilize European politics and economy
355
1136220
3320
18:59
in the coming months.
356
1139580
1680
19:01
How would you look at this from the perspective of energy,
357
1141820
3560
19:05
and is there any likelihood
358
1145420
2720
19:08
that Russian oil and gas is going to stop flowing,
359
1148180
2360
19:10
either because Putin cuts it or the Europeans sanction it?
360
1150580
2720
19:13
IB: Yeah, or because it's blown up in some of the transit in Ukraine?
361
1153340
5520
19:18
I mean, keep in mind,
362
1158900
1160
19:20
so much of the gas transit is going through large pipeline networks,
363
1160100
3200
19:23
which have some redundancy across all of Ukraine.
364
1163340
2320
19:25
But there's a big war that's going on right there,
365
1165660
2360
19:28
and lots of people that could have incentive to create problems.
366
1168020
4080
19:32
The Americans, of course, the Canadians,
367
1172940
1920
19:34
have said that they're cutting off oil import from Russia,
368
1174900
3200
19:38
but those are nominal numbers,
369
1178140
2040
19:40
so they don't matter very much to the markets.
370
1180220
2520
19:42
The Europeans, as I said,
371
1182740
1920
19:44
want to decouple themselves as quickly as possible,
372
1184700
3320
19:48
but they believe that doing that this year would be economic suicide.
373
1188020
4760
19:52
So there isn't, despite everything we see from Russia,
374
1192820
2520
19:55
they're using thermobaric weapons now against the Ukrainian people,
375
1195380
3160
19:58
the Americans are warning
376
1198540
1200
19:59
that they could use chemical, biological weapons against Ukraine.
377
1199780
3320
20:03
I mean, you know, you even have some people saying,
378
1203140
2400
20:05
what if they use a tactical nuclear weapon?
379
1205580
2000
20:07
I mean ...
380
1207620
1520
20:09
God willing, none of these things come to pass.
381
1209180
3560
20:13
But it is very hard to see a military scenario in Ukraine
382
1213380
6760
20:20
that leads the Europeans
383
1220180
1920
20:22
to completely cut off their inbound gas from Russia this year.
384
1222140
5280
20:27
It's very hard to see.
385
1227460
1200
20:28
And also, I would say, it's very hard to see any level of economic sanction
386
1228660
5760
20:34
that would change the mind of the Russians
387
1234460
3640
20:38
in terms of their military decision making
388
1238100
3880
20:42
on the ground in Ukraine.
389
1242020
1520
20:43
Now, I think there are a lot of things that the West is doing
390
1243540
2880
20:46
in terms of providing weapons for the Ukrainians
391
1246460
2240
20:48
that are having an impact on the ground.
392
1248740
1960
20:50
A lot more Russians are getting killed.
393
1250740
1880
20:52
It won’t prevent them from taking to Kyiv, again in my mind
394
1252620
2880
20:55
I feel quite confident about that.
395
1255500
1680
20:57
But it's quite possible, perhaps even likely,
396
1257220
3960
21:01
that the west of Ukraine will remain in Ukrainian hands,
397
1261220
4720
21:05
which means that, you know, after this fighting is "over,"
398
1265980
6160
21:12
that a rump Ukrainian state in exile exists in the West, run by Zelenskyy
399
1272180
4760
21:16
or someone that's aligned with him,
400
1276980
2280
21:19
and that they continue to get enormous economic and military support
401
1279300
4520
21:23
from all of the NATO countries.
402
1283860
2720
21:26
So even though I don't think
403
1286580
2880
21:29
that the energy situation will become so parlous
404
1289500
3520
21:33
that it would affect Putin's decision making,
405
1293020
2520
21:35
I do think that the West's response does matter on the ground.
406
1295580
4120
21:39
BG: The war is kind of having radiating economic shock waves around the world now,
407
1299740
6800
21:46
ripple effects on food markets, for example and food security.
408
1306540
3200
21:49
We talk a lot about energy security,
409
1309780
2000
21:51
what about food security?
410
1311780
1720
21:54
IB: Well, you have the largest grain producer in the world
411
1314220
2760
21:56
invading the fifth largest grain producer in the world
412
1316980
3280
22:00
on the back of a two-year pandemic that's still ongoing.
413
1320300
3320
22:03
We don't talk about it much anymore, but it's still there.
414
1323620
3760
22:07
And of course, this hit the poorest countries in the world the hardest.
415
1327420
4800
22:12
The level of indebtedness
416
1332660
1800
22:14
and the unsustainability of paying that debt off
417
1334460
2880
22:17
was already becoming a massive problem
418
1337380
2520
22:19
for so many of the developing countries in the world.
419
1339940
2480
22:22
And the IMF provided a lot of relief in special drawing rights and direct aid
420
1342460
5000
22:27
over the course of the past 12 months,
421
1347460
1840
22:29
but that money is now running to an end.
422
1349340
2400
22:31
And what happens when commodity prices spike up
423
1351780
3880
22:35
and we have severe supply chain challenges with energy and food,
424
1355700
3760
22:39
and those things are obviously very related.
425
1359500
2080
22:41
What happens is that a lot of people die.
426
1361620
2680
22:44
What happens is we see a lot more starvation.
427
1364740
2160
22:46
The World Food Organization says about 10 million people a year die of starvation.
428
1366900
4800
22:51
That number in the next 12 months is going to be a lot higher
429
1371740
3000
22:54
than it otherwise would have been.
430
1374740
1640
22:56
The number of people who are food stressed in the world
431
1376380
2600
22:58
is going to go way up in sub-Saharan Africa, in Yemen,
432
1378980
2720
23:01
in Afghanistan, in Bangladesh.
433
1381740
1960
23:03
It's going to go way up.
434
1383700
1760
23:05
And you know, it's horrible to think about,
435
1385500
3440
23:08
but the massive impact of this Russia crisis
436
1388980
3200
23:12
is going to be much more global inequality.
437
1392180
2480
23:14
And this is, of course,
438
1394660
1440
23:16
a direct consequence of the end of the peace dividend more structurally.
439
1396140
3560
23:19
That over the last 30 years of globalization,
440
1399740
2960
23:22
what did you have?
441
1402740
1160
23:23
A lot of people were left behind,
442
1403940
1600
23:25
but the biggest thing you had
443
1405540
1600
23:27
was the explosion of a single global middle class.
444
1407180
4800
23:32
On the back of the pandemic
445
1412500
1680
23:34
and now this Russia-Ukraine war
446
1414220
2040
23:36
and the decoupling of the Russian economy from the West,
447
1416260
3920
23:40
which doesn't matter so much in terms of the size of the Russian economy,
448
1420220
3480
23:43
but it matters immensely in terms of commodities globally and supply chain,
449
1423740
3520
23:47
those two things are going to seriously unwind
450
1427260
4320
23:51
the growth of this global middle class,
451
1431620
2120
23:53
and they're going to stress developing countries to a much greater degree.
452
1433780
3880
23:57
They will lead to financial crises in countries like Turkey, for example,
453
1437700
4080
24:01
that will no longer be able to service their debt.
454
1441780
2360
24:04
You'll see more Lebanons out there.
455
1444180
1840
24:06
You'll see some in Latin America, you'll see some in sub-Saharan Africa.
456
1446020
3800
24:09
Those are the knock-on effects and so,
457
1449860
1840
24:11
so many people that have been saying over the last few weeks,
458
1451700
2880
24:14
"Why are we paying so much attention to Ukraine?
459
1454620
2240
24:16
It's because they're white people, because they're European.
460
1456900
2840
24:19
We wouldn't pay that much attention if they were Afghans
461
1459780
2640
24:22
or if they were, you know, Afghanis or if they were Yemenis.
462
1462420
3160
24:25
We wouldn't."
463
1465580
1160
24:27
I mean, first of all, you've got millions and millions of Ukrainian refugees,
464
1467540
3720
24:31
and we're not paying as much attention to them
465
1471260
2240
24:33
as we did to the Syrian refugees precisely because of race,
466
1473540
3480
24:37
precisely because the Europeans are more willing to integrate
467
1477060
3280
24:40
millions and millions of "fellow Europeans" into Europe.
468
1480380
5640
24:46
But we are paying much more attention to the Ukraine crisis and we should,
469
1486060
4280
24:50
because the impact on the poorest people around the world
470
1490340
3640
24:54
is vastly greater
471
1494020
1520
24:55
from this conflict than anything that we've seen
472
1495540
3080
24:58
in any of those smaller economies with less impact,
473
1498660
3200
25:01
despite all of the human depredation that’s happened over the past 30 years.
474
1501860
4440
25:06
BG: Ian, I want to talk for a second about climate
475
1506660
2400
25:09
because another crisis that has, kind of, disappeared from the headlines
476
1509060
3400
25:12
is the climate crisis, right?
477
1512500
1400
25:13
Ten days ago, the IPCC released a report
478
1513940
1920
25:15
that the secretary general of the UN described
479
1515860
2160
25:18
as an "atlas of human suffering,"
480
1518020
1920
25:19
if I remember correctly.
481
1519940
1880
25:21
And it has been basically ignored.
482
1521860
3720
25:25
Over the last several years,
483
1525620
1520
25:27
much of the world had started to embark, with more or less enthusiasm,
484
1527180
3640
25:30
on a process of transitioning away from oil and gas
485
1530820
2880
25:33
and into kind of a clean energy future.
486
1533740
3800
25:37
And now the war comes in
487
1537940
1440
25:39
and we look at what you just described, the unraveling of global supply chains,
488
1539380
3760
25:43
the dependency on energy and so on.
489
1543140
1680
25:44
And there are kind of two schools of thought here.
490
1544820
2360
25:47
One says this war is going to accelerate the adoption of clean energy
491
1547180
3240
25:50
because we need to diminish dependence from Russia and these fossil fuels.
492
1550420
4680
25:55
And the other says, the other school of thought says
493
1555100
3560
25:58
it's going to derail the transition to clean energy
494
1558660
2880
26:01
because suddenly the priority is no longer decarbonization,
495
1561580
2760
26:04
suddenly the priority is energy security, energy supply.
496
1564340
2920
26:07
IB: The Europeans are largely in the first camp,
497
1567300
3160
26:10
and they will move towards faster decoupling and investment accordingly.
498
1570500
4520
26:15
The Americans are largely in the second camp,
499
1575060
3600
26:18
and they will move towards
500
1578660
1480
26:20
"Let's focus more on fossil fuels and partisan divide on this issue,"
501
1580180
4720
26:24
accordingly.
502
1584940
1600
26:26
The Chinese,
503
1586540
1160
26:27
who are the largest carbon emitter in the world by a long margin,
504
1587740
3080
26:30
though not per capita and not historically,
505
1590820
2120
26:32
but still in terms of every year totals,
506
1592980
2800
26:35
they will continue on the same path they've been on,
507
1595780
3040
26:38
which is a net-zero target
508
1598860
3680
26:42
but without yet a very strong plan on how to get there
509
1602580
3560
26:46
and not feeling a lot of pressure to provide that plan,
510
1606140
2640
26:48
because they think the Americans are completely incoherent
511
1608780
2760
26:51
and incapable of effectuating a strategic long-term plan
512
1611540
4280
26:55
on climate themselves.
513
1615860
1560
26:57
So I mean, what we have is a lot of progress on climate and, of course,
514
1617740
5880
27:03
technology around renewable energies and around electric batteries
515
1623660
5320
27:08
and supply chain
516
1628980
1280
27:10
continue to get cheaper and cheaper
517
1630260
1720
27:12
as more money is being invested in it.
518
1632020
2200
27:14
And that does make me long-term more optimistic that by 2045,
519
1634220
5320
27:19
a majority of the world's energy will probably be coming from renewables.
520
1639580
3800
27:23
And five years ago, I wouldn't have said that.
521
1643420
2160
27:25
But still, I mean, when the news today
522
1645620
3400
27:29
is that the Americans are sending a high-level delegation to Caracas
523
1649020
5160
27:34
to figure out if we can reopen relations with Venezuela
524
1654220
3160
27:37
to get them to produce more oil again.
525
1657380
2760
27:40
With the Iranians,
526
1660620
1200
27:41
let's do any deal possible to get back into the JCPOA, the nuclear deal,
527
1661820
3760
27:45
so that we can get that oil on the market.
528
1665620
2560
27:48
Calling the Saudis, calling the Emiratis,
529
1668220
2240
27:50
and they’re not willing to take Biden’s phone call on this issue
530
1670500
3040
27:53
while they're talking to Putin.
531
1673540
1520
27:55
Those are warning signals that in the near term,
532
1675060
3800
27:58
we've got some big challenges
533
1678860
1720
28:00
and a lot of those challenges are going to be filled with fossil fuels
534
1680580
3960
28:04
and fossil fuel development.
535
1684540
1360
28:05
And so I do think that the fact
536
1685940
2760
28:08
that both of the answers to your question are true in different places
537
1688740
4040
28:12
on net-net is more negative for how quickly we can transition.
538
1692820
5080
28:18
BG: Let's talk a bit about China.
539
1698340
1880
28:21
Brigid, I think, who’s listening in asks,
540
1701580
3600
28:25
"What do you believe Xi Jinping is learning
541
1705220
2240
28:27
from the world's response to the crisis, to the Ukrainian war?"
542
1707460
3520
28:32
IB: Well, certainly learning that this was a red line for the West.
543
1712820
5880
28:39
And I think that this would have surprised,
544
1719140
2120
28:41
it obviously surprised Putin,
545
1721300
1480
28:42
I think it would have surprised Xi Jinping as well.
546
1722820
2400
28:45
Xi Jinping saw Afghanistan.
547
1725220
2280
28:47
He saw that Merkel was out.
548
1727940
1720
28:49
He saw that Macron is focused on strategic autonomy.
549
1729700
4280
28:54
He sees Biden as much more focused on China and Asia.
550
1734020
3560
28:57
I think that this is a surprise to Xi Jinping.
551
1737580
3560
29:01
But Xi Jinping also sees
552
1741500
3320
29:04
that a lot of the world is not with NATO on this issue.
553
1744860
5080
29:09
141 countries, if I remember correctly,
554
1749980
4040
29:14
voted to censor the Russians for their invasion of Ukraine
555
1754060
5560
29:19
at the United Nations General Assembly.
556
1759660
2520
29:22
But very large numbers of that 141
557
1762980
2640
29:25
are not on board with all of these sanctions against Russia.
558
1765620
3800
29:29
They're happy with the diplomatic censure,
559
1769460
2040
29:31
but they need to continue to work with the Russians.
560
1771500
2480
29:33
The Chinese see that too.
561
1773980
1240
29:35
The Chinese see just how much more fragmented the global order is.
562
1775260
3680
29:38
I thought the most significant thing that we've seen from the Chinese so far
563
1778980
3680
29:42
two issues.
564
1782700
1560
29:44
The first is, of course, when Putin went to Beijing
565
1784300
2720
29:47
and Xi Jinping made the public announcement
566
1787060
2760
29:49
that “this is our best friend on the global stage,
567
1789860
3280
29:53
and we will work much more strategically with them economically,
568
1793180
3320
29:56
diplomatically and militarily going forward."
569
1796540
3000
29:59
And Xi Jinping knew very well where Ukraine was heading at that point
570
1799580
4560
30:04
and also knew that the likelihood of an invasion was coming.
571
1804180
3880
30:08
Didn't stop him from making that announcement in the slightest.
572
1808420
3200
30:12
And then after the invasion, and it's going badly,
573
1812020
4000
30:16
I mean, if you watch Chinese social media,
574
1816060
3200
30:19
the fact is that the censorship is all about Ukraine.
575
1819300
4840
30:24
I mean, the Chinese media space
576
1824180
2760
30:26
is pursuing a relentlessly pro-Putin policy.
577
1826980
4520
30:31
They have media embedded with Russian troops
578
1831540
3720
30:35
on the ground in Ukraine.
579
1835300
2760
30:38
Now, publicly, the Chinese government wants to be seen
580
1838100
4720
30:42
as: “We’re neutral, we like the Russians,
581
1842860
2760
30:45
we like the Ukrainians,
582
1845660
1200
30:46
we still want to work with everybody."
583
1846900
2000
30:48
But the fact is that China feels no problem
584
1848900
4360
30:53
being publicly completely aligned with Putin,
585
1853260
3440
30:56
despite the fact that they are invading a democratic government
586
1856740
4680
31:01
with 44 million people in the middle of Europe.
587
1861420
2880
31:04
That's a pretty astonishing statement from the Chinese.
588
1864340
3960
31:08
And there's no question that they have learned
589
1868900
2320
31:11
that they're in a vastly better economic position than they used to be,
590
1871260
3360
31:14
and that gives them influence.
591
1874620
1440
31:16
They are a government who projects its power
592
1876100
2120
31:18
primarily through economic and technological means,
593
1878220
3760
31:22
as opposed to Russia that projects it primarily through military means.
594
1882020
3440
31:25
And the Chinese believe
595
1885500
2320
31:27
that there is a level of decoupling that is already going on
596
1887860
5720
31:33
as the Americans focus on more industrial policy,
597
1893580
3080
31:36
as they focus on America first for American workers.
598
1896700
3600
31:40
A US foreign policy for the American middle class, as Biden put it,
599
1900340
3680
31:44
is one that really pushes a lot of capital to leave a country like China,
600
1904060
4640
31:48
which had served as the factory for the world,
601
1908740
3680
31:52
but at the expense of a lot of labor
602
1912460
2560
31:55
coming out of advanced industrial economies.
603
1915020
2880
31:57
And now, yes, there are definitely some dangers
604
1917940
4040
32:01
that come from the Chinese being perceived as too close to Russia,
605
1921980
3680
32:05
and they won't want that,
606
1925700
1920
32:07
and they'll want to make sure that they're engaging diplomatically
607
1927660
3120
32:10
with the Europeans to try to minimize that damage.
608
1930780
2360
32:13
But I thought it was very interesting,
609
1933180
1840
32:15
and I'm not sure this is public yet,
610
1935020
1720
32:16
that the Chinese ambassador to Russia recently, in the last few days,
611
1936780
4320
32:21
organized a meeting of a lot of the top investors
612
1941140
3640
32:24
Chinese investors in Russia, saying,
613
1944780
2480
32:27
"This is a unique opportunity, the West is leaving,
614
1947300
3720
32:31
we should be going in and doing more.
615
1951060
2560
32:33
Because they're going to be completely reliant on us going forward."
616
1953660
4320
32:38
That is not a message that the Chinese ambassador delivers
617
1958020
3840
32:41
unless he is told directly to from Beijing.
618
1961900
2440
32:44
BG: Ian, I'm going to jump from topic to topic
619
1964380
2800
32:47
because there are several questions in the chat.
620
1967180
2840
32:51
Nancy is asking about whether Putin can be removed from power.
621
1971380
4200
32:55
There's been a lot of discussion lately about regime change in Russia,
622
1975620
3760
32:59
either endogenous, like a palace coup,
623
1979380
2520
33:01
or provoked by sanctions and other policies.
624
1981940
3280
33:05
And so she asks,
625
1985220
2240
33:07
"How likely is that Putin will face a challenge from inside Russia,
626
1987460
3280
33:10
whether a popular uprising, a coup or other?"
627
1990780
2120
33:12
IB: It's very, very unlikely until it happens.
628
1992940
3320
33:16
(Chuckles)
629
1996300
1720
33:18
I mean, in the sense that there is absolutely no purpose
630
1998060
3640
33:21
in trying to say, oh, I mean, you know,
631
2001740
1920
33:23
there are rumors that Defense Minister Shoigu is unhappy and, you know,
632
2003700
4560
33:28
he might be making a move.
633
2008260
1280
33:29
And I’ve seen these from relatively credible analysts,
634
2009580
2520
33:32
I'm like, no, no, if there are such rumors,
635
2012100
2040
33:34
then we know it's not happening
636
2014180
1520
33:35
because that's the end of Shoigu and his family.
637
2015700
2400
33:38
But it's very clear that there is more pressure on Putin now
638
2018140
3240
33:41
than at any point since he's been president.
639
2021420
2080
33:43
Domestic pressure on Putin.
640
2023500
1920
33:45
About 10,000 Russians have been arrested so far, detained,
641
2025460
3440
33:48
most of them have been released,
642
2028940
1880
33:50
for nonviolent anti-war protests.
643
2030860
4640
33:55
The Russians have shut down all the Western media.
644
2035540
2360
33:57
They've shut down all the Russian opposition and independent media.
645
2037900
3560
34:01
So Putin has control of the space,
646
2041500
1840
34:03
though if you look at Russian conversations on Telegram,
647
2043380
2880
34:06
you'll still see a bunch of people that are seriously, seriously anti-war.
648
2046260
3520
34:10
But, you know, once the economy starts truly imploding
649
2050460
3600
34:14
and you can't find goods on shelves in Russia in major cities,
650
2054100
3080
34:17
and this is coming, you know, very soon, this is a matter of days,
651
2057220
3360
34:20
in many of these cities,
652
2060620
1160
34:21
those demonstrations will likely become greater,
653
2061820
2240
34:24
some of them can become violent.
654
2064100
1880
34:26
You know, that'll increase the pressure.
655
2066020
2040
34:28
Then you have the issue of how the Russians are fighting on the ground.
656
2068100
3360
34:31
I mean, what happens if you get a lot of desertions?
657
2071500
2440
34:33
We haven't seen that so far.
658
2073980
1360
34:35
What happens if you get orders to bomb Kyiv
659
2075340
3920
34:39
and a whole bunch of Russian fighter pilots, bomber pilots,
660
2079300
2880
34:42
decide not to and they defect to Poland, to Germany.
661
2082180
2880
34:45
That would have a big impact on morale.
662
2085100
2080
34:47
That has not happened so far.
663
2087220
1880
34:49
I mean, do be aware of the fact
664
2089140
2120
34:51
that the Ukrainians are winning the war on information,
665
2091300
4040
34:55
and that means that the information that you are getting in the West
666
2095380
3280
34:58
about the war
667
2098700
1200
34:59
is much more pro-Ukrainian --
668
2099940
2320
35:02
morale, enthusiasm,
669
2102260
2440
35:04
how well the military is doing --
670
2104740
1600
35:06
than what's actually happening on the ground.
671
2106380
2720
35:09
And also be aware of the fact
672
2109100
1760
35:10
that the Russians completely control the war on information inside Russia.
673
2110900
4320
35:15
BG: Exactly.
674
2115260
1200
35:16
IB: They're not getting a balanced view.
675
2116500
2000
35:18
They're getting a completely pro-Putin view.
676
2118540
2400
35:20
And most of them actually believe it
677
2120980
2200
35:23
in the same way that most people that voted for Trump in the US
678
2123220
2960
35:26
believe that the election was stolen and Trump is still president.
679
2126220
3120
35:29
I mean, it's much worse in Russia in that regard
680
2129380
2560
35:31
than it is in the United States,
681
2131980
1560
35:33
and I think that that's underappreciated in the West.
682
2133580
2520
35:36
So even though I think there's pressure,
683
2136140
2160
35:38
I really don't think that it's super likely
684
2138340
3960
35:42
that Putin is out anytime imminently.
685
2142340
3360
35:45
BG: Ed is asking whether you see any off-ramp for Putin.
686
2145740
4280
35:51
IB: I think that the most likely off-ramp for Putin is after Kyiv is taken
687
2151540
6160
35:57
and Zelenskyy is removed one way or the other,
688
2157700
4120
36:01
at that point,
689
2161860
1160
36:03
the possibility of the Russians accepting a frozen conflict
690
2163060
4040
36:07
or a cease fire that could lead to ongoing negotiations
691
2167140
4120
36:11
is a lot higher
692
2171300
1120
36:12
because Putin can sell that as a win back home much more easily.
693
2172460
4120
36:17
But also because further Russian attacks at that point
694
2177140
4040
36:21
serve much less purpose for the Russians,
695
2181220
2640
36:23
are much harder to bring about,
696
2183900
2960
36:26
and potentially have much more negative consequences.
697
2186900
3200
36:30
So for me, that would be the near-term potential break
698
2190100
5720
36:35
where we could at least freeze issues largely where they are.
699
2195860
5040
36:40
Now whether that could then eventually lead to a climbdown or not,
700
2200940
3800
36:44
I mean, the Russians have been very happy with frozen conflicts on their borders
701
2204780
4680
36:49
for years and years and years.
702
2209460
1720
36:51
I'm thinking about Nagorno-Karabakh between Armenia and Azerbaijan,
703
2211220
3320
36:54
which basically stayed in place until the Azeris,
704
2214580
2320
36:56
over the course of a decade got enough military capacity
705
2216900
2680
36:59
that they could forcibly change the situation on the ground.
706
2219620
2880
37:02
Which, by the way, the Ukrainians might also be eventually thinking about
707
2222540
4240
37:06
because the West will be supplying them with advanced weapons all the way through.
708
2226780
3920
37:10
I'm thinking South Ossetia in Georgia.
709
2230700
2520
37:13
I'm also, of course, thinking about the two pieces of Ukraine
710
2233260
2880
37:16
they took back in 2014.
711
2236140
1200
37:17
So be aware of the fact that a negotiation that creates a cease fire
712
2237340
6280
37:23
does not mean you're anywhere close to a resolution
713
2243620
3440
37:27
or an end of the fighting that we're seeing.
714
2247100
3440
37:30
BG: Someone else in the chat, who didn't sign by his or her name,
715
2250580
3680
37:34
is asking about the nuclear fear that hangs over the conflict.
716
2254300
3920
37:38
How should we think of that?
717
2258260
1560
37:40
IB: Yeah, we don't like it when Putin uses the N-word,
718
2260340
2520
37:42
and there's no question,
719
2262900
2080
37:44
I mean, he and his direct reports have rattled nuclear sabers
720
2264980
5960
37:50
on at least five times that I've seen in the past few weeks.
721
2270940
3400
37:55
I think that ...
722
2275740
2360
37:58
In 1962, I wasn't alive, we had the Cuban Missile Crisis.
723
2278140
4120
38:02
There was a real possibility of nuclear confrontation
724
2282260
2760
38:05
between the world's two superpowers.
725
2285060
1920
38:07
At least for the last 30 years, there’s been no chance of that.
726
2287300
3000
38:10
Functionally, no chance of that.
727
2290340
2000
38:12
I think we're now back in a world
728
2292380
1600
38:13
where a Cuban Missile Crisis is again a reality.
729
2293980
2840
38:16
Now, that doesn't mean that I think nuclear war is likely or imminent.
730
2296860
3880
38:20
I don't.
731
2300780
1160
38:21
And in fact,
732
2301940
1320
38:23
there is active deconfliction going on even today:
733
2303300
3800
38:27
the Americans and Russians with a new hotline,
734
2307140
2600
38:29
the secretary general of the UN,
735
2309780
2320
38:32
with the Russian defense minister
736
2312140
2840
38:34
engaging in deconfliction measures with UN
737
2314980
5080
38:40
offices being invited to Moscow.
738
2320060
2120
38:42
So as bad as it is right now,
739
2322180
2080
38:44
people that have been doing this for a long time
740
2324300
2640
38:46
are trying to avoid nuclear war.
741
2326980
2280
38:49
But that's the point.
742
2329300
1400
38:50
Is we're now in a situation
743
2330700
2560
38:53
where the conflict that we're going to experience
744
2333260
3240
38:56
needs to be actively managed
745
2336540
2600
38:59
because of the danger of nuclear confrontation.
746
2339180
3320
39:02
So it now becomes a risk on the horizon that we must be continually aware of,
747
2342540
5880
39:08
even if only at a low level,
748
2348460
2400
39:10
as we take and consider further actions,
749
2350900
3520
39:14
as we consider diplomacy,
750
2354460
1880
39:16
as we consider escalation.
751
2356340
2600
39:18
It is now on the table in a way that frankly is so debilitating.
752
2358980
4800
39:23
I mean, as human beings all on this call,
753
2363820
3600
39:27
one of the most painful things to think about
754
2367420
2240
39:29
is the fact that we still have these 5,000 nuclear warheads in Russia
755
2369700
3640
39:33
and 5,000 the United States that are still pointed at each other,
756
2373380
3080
39:36
and they still have the potential to destroy the planet.
757
2376500
2640
39:39
And we haven't had any real lessons that we've been able to learn
758
2379140
3680
39:42
institutionally from 1962.
759
2382860
2600
39:45
BG: 5,000 being a generic figure, not the exact figure,
760
2385860
2600
39:48
but we are kind of in that order of magnitude.
761
2388460
2160
39:51
Then of course, there is the question of civilian nuclear,
762
2391220
3240
39:54
so the two power plants, nuclear power plants,
763
2394500
2600
39:57
that have been seized by the Russians.
764
2397100
2040
39:59
One has been slightly damaged by a bomb,
765
2399180
2920
40:02
the other has been turned off.
766
2402140
1800
40:03
But those are also potentially gigantic nuclear problems just waiting to happen.
767
2403980
4960
40:08
IB: Chemical weapons, biological weapons.
768
2408980
2640
40:11
I mean, look, we have had two million refugees from Ukraine in two weeks.
769
2411660
4640
40:16
As this continues, you're looking at five to 10 million refugees.
770
2416900
3520
40:21
I mean, it is hard --
771
2421220
1720
40:22
Just take a step for a moment just as a human being.
772
2422980
3040
40:26
Imagine what it would take for a quarter of your country's population
773
2426060
6240
40:32
to say: “I am not living here anymore.
774
2432300
2800
40:35
I am leaving everything because of the condition of the country,
775
2435140
5000
40:40
because of this unjust war
776
2440180
2000
40:42
that has been imposed upon you by your neighbor."
777
2442220
3000
40:46
That's what we're looking at.
778
2446020
1440
40:47
And again, it's important for us to, you know,
779
2447500
3280
40:50
not lose the humanity of this crisis
780
2450820
4240
40:55
and the extraordinary hardship
781
2455060
2040
40:57
that is being visited upon 44 million Ukrainians
782
2457140
3920
41:01
that have done nothing wrong, they have committed no sin
783
2461060
2800
41:03
other than their desire to have an independent country.
784
2463900
4000
41:07
BG: One other country
785
2467940
1760
41:09
that has not yet taken a very clear position is India.
786
2469700
3680
41:13
IB: Well, they're a member of the Quad,
787
2473740
1880
41:15
and their relationship with China is pretty bad, and that’s mutual.
788
2475620
4160
41:20
But in terms of Russia,
789
2480380
1640
41:22
there's been a longstanding relationship,
790
2482060
2120
41:24
trade relationship, defense relationship
791
2484180
2440
41:26
between India and Russia
792
2486660
1720
41:28
that the Russians are not going to jettison,
793
2488380
2440
41:30
and they see no reason to jettison it.
794
2490860
1880
41:32
And as long as you've got a whole bunch of other countries out there
795
2492780
3240
41:36
that are substantial, that are willing to say,
796
2496060
2160
41:38
we're going to keep playing ball with the Russians
797
2498260
2360
41:40
then the Indians will too.
798
2500620
1240
41:41
And that's why you've got the abstention in the United Nations vote.
799
2501900
5720
41:47
And that's why you've had very careful comments
800
2507620
4120
41:51
as opposed to overt and strong condemnation
801
2511780
3240
41:55
coming from the Indian leadership.
802
2515060
1960
41:57
BG: Phil in the chat is asking,
803
2517020
1800
41:58
"Will this cause a fragmentation of the financial system
804
2518860
3120
42:01
with kind of a Western system and an Eastern system?”
805
2521980
3640
42:05
So two different SWIFT-like systems, two different credit card systems,
806
2525660
5360
42:11
crypto, what's the role of crypto in all this?
807
2531060
2240
42:13
IB: I hope not.
808
2533900
1480
42:16
I mean, I will tell you that before the invasion started,
809
2536100
2800
42:18
if you talk to most Western CEOs,
810
2538900
3360
42:22
and I'm talking across the entire sweep of sectors,
811
2542300
4520
42:26
so it's finance and it's manufacturing and its services and it's tech,
812
2546820
4120
42:30
most of them would have told you that they did not in any way plan
813
2550980
4360
42:35
on reducing their footprint in China,
814
2555380
2000
42:37
and a lot of them said
815
2557420
1160
42:38
that China was their most important growth market in the world.
816
2558620
2960
42:41
Not a surprise.
817
2561580
1200
42:42
China is going to be the largest economy in the world in 2030.
818
2562820
2920
42:45
So, you know, a world that you're decoupling
819
2565780
2320
42:48
is not a good world
820
2568140
2400
42:50
when China is going to be number one economically.
821
2570540
3080
42:53
I mean, that obviously is going to hurt the West in a big way.
822
2573660
2920
42:56
So there are strong incentives against that,
823
2576580
2080
42:58
and there remain very strong and powerful entrenched interests
824
2578700
3120
43:01
in the United States and Europe that will resist direct decoupling.
825
2581820
3760
43:05
Despite the fact that there are these more incremental moves
826
2585940
4720
43:10
towards friendsourcing and insourcing
827
2590700
2240
43:12
because, you know, Chinese labor is more expensive,
828
2592980
2600
43:15
you don’t need as much labor to get capital moving,
829
2595620
5360
43:21
given robotics
830
2601020
2120
43:23
and big data, deep learning all of those things.
831
2603180
3040
43:26
But I do think that the Russia conflict
832
2606900
3880
43:30
risks a level of second-order decoupling.
833
2610820
4640
43:35
Because if the Russians end up financially integrated with China
834
2615500
5800
43:41
in their own,
835
2621340
1160
43:42
not-as-effective SWIFT system,
836
2622500
1600
43:44
and all of their energy ends up going to China
837
2624140
3520
43:47
and the Chinese build that infrastructure and they get a discount on it,
838
2627700
3400
43:51
and Russia's technology and their military industrial complex gets serviced
839
2631140
4880
43:56
by Chinese semiconductors and Chinese componentry,
840
2636060
4280
44:00
well, I do think that there will be knock-on decoupling
841
2640380
4040
44:04
that will be longer term and more strategic
842
2644420
2760
44:07
from the United States, from the Europeans
843
2647220
2000
44:09
and even from Japan and South Korea.
844
2649260
2520
44:11
So that is a worry,
845
2651820
2680
44:14
and I think the Chinese are highly aware of that.
846
2654500
3280
44:17
And over the coming months, they will do everything they can,
847
2657820
3560
44:21
both with the Europeans in particular,
848
2661420
3160
44:24
but also, I expect at least with some of the Asian economies,
849
2664620
5560
44:30
to try to limit the impact of that.
850
2670220
2520
44:32
Now, keep in mind,
851
2672740
1600
44:34
we haven't talked at all about Asia yet outside of China.
852
2674340
3840
44:38
The new Japanese Prime Minister Kishida is at least as hawkish
853
2678220
4880
44:43
in his orientation towards China and Russia as Abe was.
854
2683100
4640
44:47
He is providing support for the Ukrainians,
855
2687740
2720
44:50
including some military capacity --
856
2690460
2400
44:52
unheard of for the Japanese.
857
2692900
1720
44:54
He's allowing Ukrainian refugees --
858
2694660
2720
44:57
unheard of for the Japanese.
859
2697380
1600
44:59
And yesterday, the South Koreans had a very, very tight election,
860
2699020
3960
45:03
and Yoon is now in charge.
861
2703020
2360
45:05
He is on the right, and he is the guy that is strongly anti-China,
862
2705420
5080
45:10
was talking about South Korea having nuclear capabilities,
863
2710540
4440
45:15
wants a new THAAD missile defense system for the South Koreans
864
2715020
3960
45:19
and wants to rebuild the relationship with Tokyo.
865
2719020
3640
45:22
That matters.
866
2722700
1280
45:24
And that's a big strategic change in the geopolitical map
867
2724020
5240
45:29
that will look more problematic on the decoupling front
868
2729260
2840
45:32
from Beijing's perspective.
869
2732100
1920
45:34
BG: Three final quick questions that all come from the chat, Ian.
870
2734500
3200
45:37
One is, because you mentioned the rest of Asia outside of China,
871
2737700
3160
45:40
"What about the rest of the world?
872
2740900
1640
45:42
What about Africa and Latin America?
873
2742580
1720
45:44
How do they factor into this conversation or don't they?"
874
2744340
2720
45:47
IB: They factor in.
875
2747060
1200
45:48
I mean, those that have significant commodities do well
876
2748300
2680
45:50
because the prices are going to be so high.
877
2750980
2040
45:53
Those that don't are going to be under massive pressure
878
2753020
2600
45:55
for reasons we already talked about,
879
2755660
1920
45:57
but they are not going to be forced to pick a side on this one.
880
2757620
4360
46:02
I just don't see it.
881
2762020
1320
46:03
In the same way that if you were Colombia in the last couple of years,
882
2763700
3320
46:07
you know, you found,
883
2767060
1160
46:08
even though you're working very closely with an American ally,
884
2768220
2960
46:11
you're still dealing with Huawei and 5G.
885
2771220
2560
46:14
This is knock-on effects of all of this.
886
2774140
2640
46:16
These are countries that are not going to take on
887
2776820
3120
46:19
significant economic burden,
888
2779940
1360
46:21
given how much they're suffering right now geopolitically.
889
2781340
2720
46:24
BG: Another one is about sanctions.
890
2784100
2080
46:26
How do we even know when and how,
891
2786220
3160
46:29
at what point we start rolling back sanctions?
892
2789380
2920
46:33
IB: I think that as long as Ukraine is occupied
893
2793740
6360
46:40
by the Russian government
894
2800140
1760
46:41
for the foreseeable future and Putin is there,
895
2801900
2360
46:44
I can't see these sanctions getting unwound.
896
2804300
2680
46:47
Now, if a rump Ukrainian government that is democratically elected
897
2807020
5280
46:52
were prepared to sue for peace and retakes most of Ukraine,
898
2812340
4320
46:56
but they give away Crimea and they give away the Donbass,
899
2816660
2800
46:59
could you see in that environment some of these sanctions unwound?
900
2819500
3880
47:03
Sure.
901
2823420
1200
47:04
But I mean, I am suggesting
902
2824660
2240
47:06
that I think that many of these sanctions are functionally permanent.
903
2826940
4040
47:11
They reflect a new way of doing business.
904
2831020
3240
47:14
And when people ask me what’s going to happen when this is over,
905
2834300
3240
47:17
my response is, what do you mean over?
906
2837580
1840
47:19
What's over is the peace dividend.
907
2839460
2240
47:21
We are now in a new environment.
908
2841700
1600
47:23
BG: And one of the figures of this new environment
909
2843940
2360
47:26
and I want to close with that, is President Zelenskyy of Ukraine,
910
2846300
3520
47:29
who was not taken very seriously when he was elected,
911
2849860
2880
47:32
he has come out as a significant figure in this war.
912
2852780
4280
47:37
What do you make of President Zelenskyy?
913
2857060
2200
47:39
How do you read this character?
914
2859300
1840
47:41
IB: He's very courageous.
915
2861140
1880
47:43
I'm obviously inspired by his ability to communicate and rally his people
916
2863500
6160
47:49
and take personal risk in Kyiv while this invasion is going on.
917
2869660
5360
47:55
But I'm very conflicted
918
2875060
1680
47:56
because I think many of the steps that Zelenskyy took
919
2876780
2920
47:59
in the run-up to this conflict
920
2879740
2240
48:01
actually made the likelihood of conflict worse.
921
2881980
3560
48:05
He was unwilling to take the advice of the Americans and Europeans seriously
922
2885580
5760
48:11
in the months leading up to the conflict.
923
2891340
2000
48:13
He was unwilling to mobilize his people
924
2893380
2560
48:15
to ready them for the potential of conflict.
925
2895980
2720
48:18
He was certainly unwilling to give an inch
926
2898740
2800
48:21
in terms of Ukraine's desire to be a member of NATO,
927
2901580
4920
48:26
even though he knew completely
928
2906540
2320
48:28
that no one in NATO was prepared to offer a membership action plan,
929
2908900
3640
48:32
let alone actually bring them in as members.
930
2912580
2760
48:35
And part of that is a lack of experience
931
2915340
4320
48:39
and lack of any business being in that position
932
2919700
4440
48:44
in the run-up to this crisis.
933
2924180
1440
48:45
So I’m very deeply conflicted in my personal views on Zelenskyy,
934
2925660
4800
48:50
given the way he behaved before the invasion,
935
2930460
2520
48:53
compared to the extraordinary leadership that he has displayed to all of us
936
2933020
4200
48:57
over the last two weeks.
937
2937260
1520
48:59
BG: Ian, thank you for taking the time,
938
2939300
1880
49:01
for sharing your knowledge, and your analysis with us.
939
2941220
2560
49:03
We deeply appreciate it. Thank you very much.
940
2943780
2120
49:05
IB: Good to see all of you.
941
2945900
1320
49:07
[Get access to thought-provoking events you won't want to miss.]
942
2947220
3040
49:10
[Become a TED Member at ted.com/membership]
943
2950260
2800
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7