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

1,665,407 views ・ 2022-03-11

TED


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00:03
Bruno Giussani: It's difficult to think clearly
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of the Russian invasion of Ukraine,
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because wars, while they unfold,
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they're kind of shrouded in a sort of fog.
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Information is abundant:
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the millions of refugees,
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the shocking suffering and the destruction, the politics.
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But sense is lacking.
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And that's going to be the focus of this Membership conversation
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as we enter the third week of the war.
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We won’t talk about the events of the day
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but try to project a longer arc, a broader context.
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Our guest is geopolitical analyst Ian Bremmer.
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He's the founder and president of Eurasia Group,
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and we asked him to lay the scene
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by talking first about the geopolitical shifts
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that have already been brought by the war in Ukraine.
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And after, we're going to have a conversation,
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including questions from TED Members who are participating in this call.
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Ian, welcome.
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Ian Bremmer: Thank you very much.
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I'll start by saying that in my lifetime,
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the most important geopolitical artifact is the fall of the Berlin Wall.
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I mean, you see it
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if you go into the new NATO headquarters in Brussels,
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just built a few years ago.
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And anyone that has a piece, something they're very proud of,
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they know it affected their entire lives.
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I think that in 30 years' time,
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and I fear that in 30 years' time,
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if we look back,
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a second most important geopolitical artifact
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will be a piece of the rubble of the Maidan in Kyiv.
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I believe that the war that we are seeing right now
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is no more and no less
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than the end of the peace dividend
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that we all thought we had
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when the wall came down in 1989.
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The idea that the world could focus more on globalization
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and goods and services and people and ideas
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going faster and faster across borders,
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leading to unprecedented growth in human development
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and a global middle class.
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I think that this is a tipping point.
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Won't end globalization,
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but it does end the peace dividend.
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It does mean that the Europeans overnight
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will and must prioritize spending on defense policy,
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on national security, coordination, on NATO.
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And the speech that was given by Olaf Scholz,
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the new chancellor, two weeks ago,
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in my view, the most significant speech given by a European leader
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in the post-Cold War environment,
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precisely because it's now the post-post-Cold War environment,
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sending weapons to the Ukrainians,
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committing to over two percent of GDP spend on defense,
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investing in a new fund for defense infrastructure.
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But also recognizing that the way
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that the Germans and the Europeans as a whole
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looked at the world and looked at themselves was,
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unfortunately for all of us, outdated.
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A few other points I'd like to raise, just to kick off this conversation.
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One:
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One of the reasons I'm pretty negative about this,
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and I'm not usually very negative, I'm usually an existential optimist,
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I’m someone that’s just happy there’s water in the glass.
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But when I look at this conflict, I’m much more concerned.
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And that is because I do not see a scenario,
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a plausible scenario, in the foreseeable future
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where Putin emerges from this war
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in anything less than a radically weakened position
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compared to where he was before he announced the invasion.
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And I believe that both in terms of his domestic political orientation,
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how stable he is in his own country,
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also, of course, Russia's economic position,
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and finally, Russia's position in terms of global security
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and European security:
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ostensibly, the very reason that Putin began the war to begin with.
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Second big point is that the decoupling that we are seeing from Europe
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and the United States with Russia is, in my view, permanent.
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And that would be true even if there were a negotiated settlement
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and all the Russian troops were to pull out of Ukraine
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and we had peace.
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I still think that a lot of those companies would not come back
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with Putin in power.
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I'm convinced that the decisions by the Europeans
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to ramp up their national security capabilities will be permanent.
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Permanent deployments coming in the Baltic states, for example,
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forward deployments in Poland and Bulgaria and Romania.
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And also an unwind of Europe’s massive energy dependence:
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coal, oil and most importantly, gas
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on Russia.
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That does not make Russia a global pariah
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because you can't be a global pariah
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if the soon-to-be most important economy in the world, China,
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is actually your bestie on the global stage,
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and that indeed continues to be true
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despite China's efforts to portray themselves,
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towards Europe at least,
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as more neutral.
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We are going to see the Russians as a supplicant economically,
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in terms of energy flows,
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financially, in terms of transactions,
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and technologically, perhaps most important,
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aligned with China.
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That has big geopolitical implications long-term.
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Also, a lot of other developing economies, like the Indians,
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like the Gulf states, like Brazil,
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are also not going to work with Russia as a pariah.
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They'll continue to engage.
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Are there any silver linings?
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And I think there are a few.
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Of course, there is a much greater renewed purpose and mission of NATO.
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I mean, this is an organization that just a couple of years ago,
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France President Emmanuel Macron referred to as “brain-dead.”
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It was increasingly drifting in terms of its importance.
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The Americans were focusing much more on Asia, the pivot.
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Not today.
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Today, NATO is purposeful,
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it's aligned, it's consolidated.
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it's going to get more resources, not less.
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That's also true of the European Union as a whole,
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even when we talk about countries like Hungary and Poland
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that have been much less aligned in terms of rule of law,
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in terms of an independent judiciary,
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much more aligned in terms of the importance
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of common values of Europe
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compared to that of what we're seeing in Moscow.
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I mentioned the German security and policy shift.
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The UK-EU relationship is much smoother and more functional
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than at any point since Brexit process actually started.
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And even the United States.
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I mean, if you watched the State of the Union
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for a brief moment in time, five or 10 minutes,
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when all of the Democrats and Republicans were standing and applauding together,
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you could be forgiven for believing that the United States
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had a functional representative democracy.
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Now I'm not sure how long this is going to last,
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but at least as of now,
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leaders of the Democratic and Republican Party
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see Putin as much more of a threat, an enemy,
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than they do their opponents across the aisle in domestic politics.
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And two weeks ago, that was not true.
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That's significant.
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Final silver lining, and I wish it was more of one,
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but the Chinese,
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as much as they are strategically aligned with Russia
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and with the person of President Putin,
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they do not want a second Cold War.
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And they would rather a negotiated settlement.
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They're not willing to push very hard for it.
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But they certainly do not see a radical decoupling of the Russian,
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and potentially the Chinese economy,
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from the rest of the world, from Europe,
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from the US, from the advanced industrial democracies,
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as in any way in their interest.
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And ultimately, that does create at least some buffer,
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some guardrail on how much this is likely to escalate as a conflict going forward.
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BG: I want to make a step back and unpack some of that,
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maybe starting with a question that relates to your last point
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and is probably on the mind of many.
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And it is:
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Is there still some real space for negotiation?
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Is there still a potential relationship between Russia and Ukraine?
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IB: The foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine just met recently in Turkey.
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It was as much of a non-event
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as the three preceding negotiations of more junior representatives
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of their teams on the Belarus border.
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The one thing that has been accomplished to a small degree
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has been humanitarian corridors,
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extending out of a number of Ukrainian cities
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that are being pounded by Russian military.
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That's because the Ukrainians are interested in protecting their civilians,
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and the Russians are interested in taking a lot of territory
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without necessarily having to kill so many Ukrainians,
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that could cause problems for them internationally
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as well as domestically inside Russia.
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But that is nowhere close to a negotiated settlement.
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Now, I mean, everyone I know
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that's involved in the negotiations right now
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responds that the President Putin himself is hell-bent on taking Kyiv
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and on removing Zelenskyy from power.
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Now I think, and by the way, they're getting quite close
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to being able to accomplish that militarily on the ground.
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I think within the next couple of weeks, certainly, it looks very likely.
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A couple of points here.
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One, there is no reason to put any stock in anything
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that the Russians are saying publicly in terms of their diplomacy.
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They lied to the face of every world leader
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about the invasion that they said they were not going to do into Ukraine.
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And then just today,
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Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov publicly said,
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well, the Russians didn't attack Ukraine.
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I mean, this is Orwellian stuff, right?
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So first of all, do not report on Russian public statements
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as if they bear any semblance to reality on the ground.
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Secondarily, this looks like a huge loss for Putin right now.
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He understands it, and I think he would have a hard time,
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even with his control of information, spinning this to his public
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without removing Zelenskyy,
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without the “de-Nazification,” as he calls it --
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which is an obscenity in an environment
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where the Ukrainian president is actually Jewish --
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the disarmament of Ukraine,
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and of course, the ability of the Russians
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to change how they feel about Ukraine as a threat to the Russian homeland.
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BG: What level of support can we give Ukraine militarily,
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intel, economic,
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before Putin considers taking a strike on a NATO country?
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IB: Well, it’s interesting the way you framed that, Bruno.
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Because I mean,
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I think that Putin is already considering strikes on NATO countries.
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I mean, there were massive attacks,
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cyberattacks and disinformation attacks,
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by Russia against NATO countries with reckless abandon
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over the course of the past years.
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And in fact, when President Biden met with Putin in Geneva back in June,
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it seems like years and years ago at this point,
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Biden set the agenda.
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Ukraine was largely not discussed,
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but what was discussed was cyberattacks on critical infrastructure.
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Because you may remember Bruno,
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that meeting came right after the cyber attacks
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against the Colonial Pipeline.
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And the Russians after that indeed pulled back
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on supporting those attacks by their criminal cyber syndicates.
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I expect those attacks to restart in very short order
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against NATO countries.
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I also believe that the fact that the West is sending weapons to Ukraine
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and is providing real-time intelligence reports
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on the disposition of Russian troops on the ground in Ukraine
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to better allow the Ukrainians to defend themselves
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and blow the Russians up,
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that is considered by the Russians to be an act of war,
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and they will retaliate.
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And how they retaliate is the question.
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I don't think they're going to send troops into Poland.
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But you know,
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when the Americans under Reagan were providing that kind of support
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to the mujahideen
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to help them defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan,
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the Soviets saw that as an act of war,
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and they engaged in acts of terrorism against the mujahideen in Pakistan.
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And I absolutely think that that is on the table
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in terms of front line NATO countries especially,
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like Poland, like the Baltic states, like Bulgaria, Romania.
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Would that be considered an Article V attack?
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Would that force NATO countries to strike the Russians back?
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I'm not sure it would.
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Not directly, not militarily.
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So I mean, I do think that the fact that the NATO countries see
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there is some sort of a big red line between sending troops in, for example,
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and doing a no-fly zone because that could cause World War III,
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but everything short of that is just a proxy war.
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The Russians don't see it that way.
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And that gives the Russians some advantage tactically
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in terms of their willingness to escalate.
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BG: You're describing a spiral of escalation here
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that will touch the globe and not only Ukraine,
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not only the eastern flank of Europe,
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which means that not only this war has ripple effects everywhere,
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but this is also starting a sort of realignment
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of the global geopolitical situation and context.
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To me, it has been very striking how Europe and the US
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have kind of moved very fast in a cohesive way.
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And it has chosen, after years of prioritizing the economics
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in their international and global dealings,
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it's chosen to put politics over markets.
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It has adopted sanctions that will hurt Russia,
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but will also hurt Western businesses.
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It’s the discussion about decoupling that you put forward before,
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an active kind of fencing out of the Russian economy.
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Talk to us about how do you see this decoupling playing out.
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IB: Yeah, I mean, I do think that for the Europeans,
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this is a permanent move.
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I mean, I've spoken to top leaders in the German government
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who tell me that Nord Stream was a strategic mistake,
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and they understand it.
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Who say that, you know,
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Scholz making this speech from the Social Democratic Party
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on the center left
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is the equivalent of Nixon going to China.
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No one else could have made that move.
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But having made it, everyone is on board.
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The popularity in Germany,
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even given the massive economic consequences,
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is extraordinary and is across the board.
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15:11
And what they need to do now
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15:13
is ensure that the diversification of fossil fuels in the near term
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15:18
away from Russia,
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15:19
towards Qatar and Azerbaijan and even, you know,
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15:23
sort of the United States for LNG,
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15:26
can be done as fast as humanly possible.
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15:30
And that further, even though it’s going to cost a lot,
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15:33
some of it will be uneconomic,
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15:35
the move towards renewables actually picks up and is faster.
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15:39
The Italians, Mario Draghi,
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15:41
I think his shift in strategic orientation that they will do,
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15:47
this is his "whatever it takes" moment.
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15:48
He had that in response to the 2008 financial crisis
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15:52
as the head of the European Central Bank,
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15:54
and that made him “Super Mario.”
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15:56
This is making him Super Mario as the Italian prime minister.
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3840
16:00
This is the "whatever it takes" moment for the Italians
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3920
16:04
who never make public statements that undermine their economic,
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4880
16:09
their commercial interests like this in such a strategic way.
305
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4280
16:13
The French, of course, have less to be concerned about
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3400
16:17
in the sense that most of their energy comes from nuclear power and is domestic.
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5000
16:22
So they are not as affected directly by a cut-off from Russia.
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6080
16:28
And also because Macron fancies himself,
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2680
16:30
especially as the leader of the European Commission this year,
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4200
16:35
the rotating leadership, occupying the presidency,
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16:37
but also with his elections coming up,
312
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1880
16:39
and just given his personal belief that he can drive diplomacy,
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16:44
I believe that even after Kyiv falls
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16:48
and after Zelenskyy is either killed or forced out
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16:51
that the Americans will not want to engage in direct diplomacy,
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16:56
the Germans probably won't.
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1840
16:58
The French will.
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16:59
And by the way, the Chinese will too.
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2800
17:02
And I do believe that there is a potential,
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2960
17:05
and this is a danger for the cohesiveness of the West,
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4200
17:10
that the Chinese and Macron end up being the post-Kyiv Normandy format
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6160
17:16
of diplomacy.
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1440
17:17
That's something that the Americans and the Germans right now
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17:20
are starting to worry about quite a bit.
325
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1960
17:22
Now that's the European shift.
326
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2160
17:24
And I think, as I said, I think it's permanent.
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17:27
I believe the UK is in that camp as well.
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17:31
I'm not so sure the United States is going to be as committed
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4400
17:35
for as long a term.
330
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1120
17:36
It doesn't affect the Americans as much economically,
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2520
17:39
it doesn't affect the Americans as much in terms of a direct security issue.
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3640
17:43
None of those refugees are coming to the United States.
333
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3240
17:46
But also American inequality,
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2560
17:48
American political polarization and dysfunction is so much greater
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4800
17:53
than what you experience on the continent in Europe.
336
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2680
17:56
So the potential that in six months' time or in two years' time,
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4520
18:00
as we're thinking about the 2024 election,
338
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2400
18:03
that the Americans have largely forgotten about this Russia issue instead,
339
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4000
18:07
are focusing once again on domestic political opponents
340
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3960
18:11
as principal adversaries,
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1640
18:13
which deeply undermines NATO,
342
1093020
2400
18:15
much more than anything that would come from the Europeans,
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1095460
2800
18:18
I think that is a real open question going forward
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3760
18:22
that is perhaps as significant as the question of where the Chinese go.
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4200
18:26
BG: Let me pick up on the point you made about energy,
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2600
18:28
because somehow Putin's calculus can really change
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4960
18:33
if Russian oil and gas stops flowing to Europe,
348
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3560
18:37
if it becomes part of the sanctions, right?
349
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18:40
And this war indeed can kind of be read
350
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2320
18:42
as a war about energy.
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18:43
Selling energy funds it for Russia,
352
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3360
18:47
being dependent on Russian energy makes the European response more constrained.
353
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18:52
Rising energy insecurity, rising energy cost
354
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3720
18:56
may or probably will destabilize European politics and economy
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3320
18:59
in the coming months.
356
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1680
19:01
How would you look at this from the perspective of energy,
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3560
19:05
and is there any likelihood
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2720
19:08
that Russian oil and gas is going to stop flowing,
359
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2360
19:10
either because Putin cuts it or the Europeans sanction it?
360
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2720
19:13
IB: Yeah, or because it's blown up in some of the transit in Ukraine?
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5520
19:18
I mean, keep in mind,
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1160
19:20
so much of the gas transit is going through large pipeline networks,
363
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3200
19:23
which have some redundancy across all of Ukraine.
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2320
19:25
But there's a big war that's going on right there,
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2360
19:28
and lots of people that could have incentive to create problems.
366
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4080
19:32
The Americans, of course, the Canadians,
367
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1920
19:34
have said that they're cutting off oil import from Russia,
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3200
19:38
but those are nominal numbers,
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2040
19:40
so they don't matter very much to the markets.
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2520
19:42
The Europeans, as I said,
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1920
19:44
want to decouple themselves as quickly as possible,
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3320
19:48
but they believe that doing that this year would be economic suicide.
373
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4760
19:52
So there isn't, despite everything we see from Russia,
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2520
19:55
they're using thermobaric weapons now against the Ukrainian people,
375
1195380
3160
19:58
the Americans are warning
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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,
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2400
20:05
what if they use a tactical nuclear weapon?
379
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2000
20:07
I mean ...
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1520
20:09
God willing, none of these things come to pass.
381
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3560
20:13
But it is very hard to see a military scenario in Ukraine
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6760
20:20
that leads the Europeans
383
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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
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1200
20:28
And also, I would say, it's very hard to see any level of economic sanction
386
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5760
20:34
that would change the mind of the Russians
387
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3640
20:38
in terms of their military decision making
388
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3880
20:42
on the ground in Ukraine.
389
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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
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1880
20:52
It won’t prevent them from taking to Kyiv, again in my mind
394
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2880
20:55
I feel quite confident about that.
395
1255500
1680
20:57
But it's quite possible, perhaps even likely,
396
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3960
21:01
that the west of Ukraine will remain in Ukrainian hands,
397
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4720
21:05
which means that, you know, after this fighting is "over,"
398
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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
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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
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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
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1640
22:56
The number of people who are food stressed in the world
431
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2600
22:58
is going to go way up in sub-Saharan Africa, in Yemen,
432
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2720
23:01
in Afghanistan, in Bangladesh.
433
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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
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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
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2480
23:14
And this is, of course,
438
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1440
23:16
a direct consequence of the end of the peace dividend more structurally.
439
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3560
23:19
That over the last 30 years of globalization,
440
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2960
23:22
what did you have?
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1160
23:23
A lot of people were left behind,
442
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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
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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
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4080
24:01
that will no longer be able to service their debt.
454
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2360
24:04
You'll see more Lebanons out there.
455
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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
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1840
24:11
so many people that have been saying over the last few weeks,
458
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2880
24:14
"Why are we paying so much attention to Ukraine?
459
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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1560
29:44
The first is, of course, when Putin went to Beijing
565
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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2800
41:03
other than their desire to have an independent country.
784
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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
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and I think the Chinese are highly aware of that.
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And over the coming months, they will do everything they can,
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both with the Europeans in particular,
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but also, I expect at least with some of the Asian economies,
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to try to limit the impact of that.
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Now, keep in mind,
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we haven't talked at all about Asia yet outside of China.
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The new Japanese Prime Minister Kishida is at least as hawkish
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in his orientation towards China and Russia as Abe was.
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He is providing support for the Ukrainians,
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including some military capacity --
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unheard of for the Japanese.
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He's allowing Ukrainian refugees --
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unheard of for the Japanese.
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And yesterday, the South Koreans had a very, very tight election,
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and Yoon is now in charge.
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He is on the right, and he is the guy that is strongly anti-China,
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was talking about South Korea having nuclear capabilities,
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wants a new THAAD missile defense system for the South Koreans
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and wants to rebuild the relationship with Tokyo.
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That matters.
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And that's a big strategic change in the geopolitical map
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that will look more problematic on the decoupling front
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from Beijing's perspective.
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BG: Three final quick questions that all come from the chat, Ian.
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One is, because you mentioned the rest of Asia outside of China,
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"What about the rest of the world?
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What about Africa and Latin America?
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How do they factor into this conversation or don't they?"
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IB: They factor in.
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I mean, those that have significant commodities do well
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because the prices are going to be so high.
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Those that don't are going to be under massive pressure
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for reasons we already talked about,
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but they are not going to be forced to pick a side on this one.
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I just don't see it.
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In the same way that if you were Colombia in the last couple of years,
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you know, you found,
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even though you're working very closely with an American ally,
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you're still dealing with Huawei and 5G.
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This is knock-on effects of all of this.
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These are countries that are not going to take on
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significant economic burden,
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given how much they're suffering right now geopolitically.
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BG: Another one is about sanctions.
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How do we even know when and how,
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at what point we start rolling back sanctions?
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IB: I think that as long as Ukraine is occupied
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by the Russian government
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for the foreseeable future and Putin is there,
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I can't see these sanctions getting unwound.
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Now, if a rump Ukrainian government that is democratically elected
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were prepared to sue for peace and retakes most of Ukraine,
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but they give away Crimea and they give away the Donbass,
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could you see in that environment some of these sanctions unwound?
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Sure.
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But I mean, I am suggesting
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that I think that many of these sanctions are functionally permanent.
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They reflect a new way of doing business.
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And when people ask me what’s going to happen when this is over,
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my response is, what do you mean over?
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What's over is the peace dividend.
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We are now in a new environment.
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BG: And one of the figures of this new environment
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and I want to close with that, is President Zelenskyy of Ukraine,
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who was not taken very seriously when he was elected,
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he has come out as a significant figure in this war.
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What do you make of President Zelenskyy?
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How do you read this character?
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IB: He's very courageous.
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I'm obviously inspired by his ability to communicate and rally his people
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and take personal risk in Kyiv while this invasion is going on.
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But I'm very conflicted
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because I think many of the steps that Zelenskyy took
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in the run-up to this conflict
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actually made the likelihood of conflict worse.
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He was unwilling to take the advice of the Americans and Europeans seriously
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in the months leading up to the conflict.
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He was unwilling to mobilize his people
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to ready them for the potential of conflict.
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He was certainly unwilling to give an inch
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in terms of Ukraine's desire to be a member of NATO,
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even though he knew completely
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that no one in NATO was prepared to offer a membership action plan,
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let alone actually bring them in as members.
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And part of that is a lack of experience
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and lack of any business being in that position
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in the run-up to this crisis.
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So I’m very deeply conflicted in my personal views on Zelenskyy,
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given the way he behaved before the invasion,
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compared to the extraordinary leadership that he has displayed to all of us
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over the last two weeks.
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BG: Ian, thank you for taking the time,
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for sharing your knowledge, and your analysis with us.
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We deeply appreciate it. Thank you very much.
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IB: Good to see all of you.
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[Get access to thought-provoking events you won't want to miss.]
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49:10
[Become a TED Member at ted.com/membership]
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