The Peterborough Examiner

G7 ministers agree to call Russia out on ‘malign’ behaviour, Johnson says

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Canada and Britain are showing enthusiasm for a concerted G7 effort to take Russia to task for what they are calling a broad range of “malign” behaviour, but their American ally is sounding a less effusive note.

British Foreign Secretary

Boris Johnson offered an early glimpse Monday of his fellow G7 foreign ministers’ decision to strike a working group to defend against Russian threats to undermine democracy. His Canadian host and counterpar­t, Chrystia Freeland, was quick to agree. But their U.S. counterpar­t at the G7 foreign ministers meeting — U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan — didn’t bother mentioning the initiative in his closing public remarks.

Sullivan was pinch-hitting for U.S. President Donald Trump’s new pick for secretary of state, CIA director Mike Pompeo, who faces strong opposition to his confirmati­on, and could not represent his country during the overlappin­g meeting of G7 foreign and interior ministers, which continues Tuesday. Sullivan opted instead to highlight the North Korea nuclear crisis in his closing summit remarks, following Pompeo’s secret mission to the Hermit Kingdom two weeks ago to pave the way for a Trump meeting with its leader, Kim Jong Un. But Freeland pushed Russia to the top of a packed agenda that included North Korea, Iran, the ongoing Syrian crisis, and the Venezuela and Rohingya Muslim unrest. She won agreement from participan­ts to strike a working group — “homework,” she called it — so that the G7 leaders could address Russian “malign behaviour” at their June summit in Charlevoix, Que.

Russia is, of course, a politicall­y charged issue for Trump, with special counsel Robert Mueller investigat­ing allegation­s of possible collusion between Russia and the campaign that brought the president to power in 2016. The G7 ministers agreed in their Sunday discussion about the need to address the disruptive influence of Vladimir Putin’s Russia, including its interferen­ce in foreign elections and its disseminat­ion of fake news.

“What we decided ... was that we were going to set up a G7 group that would look at Russian malign behaviour in all its manifestat­ions, whether it’s cyberwar, whether it’s disinforma­tion, assassinat­ion attempts, whatever it happens to be and collective­ly try and call it out,” Johnson said Monday while his counterpar­ts were still talking behind closed doors. “Russia is so unbelievab­ly clever at kind of sowing doubt and confusion and spreading all this fake news and trying to muddy the waters. We think there’s a role for the G7 in just trying to provide some clarity.”

Freeland had few specifics on what the new G7 working group would be doing, but she said there was unanimity among G7 ministers for a concerted effort to tackle Russian disinforma­tion and meddling in the world’s democracie­s. She said she and her fellow ministers talked about “democracy being under attack, and in particular about Russian efforts to destabiliz­e some democracie­s and about Russian disinforma­tion.” Freeland said she was glad Johnson talked about the working group because “I think it is one of the most important and interestin­g outcomes of our conversati­on.”

Sullivan didn’t mention the Russia working group in his summary of the talks or single out the Kremlin’s use disinforma­tion, but he said the U.S. remains committed to the G7’s endeavour.

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