The Economist (North America)

From “flawless” to lawless

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Angela Merkel’s glum trip to Moscow and Kyiv

When angela merkel took over as Germany’s chancellor in 2005 Western leaders had high hopes that Russia would progress from semiauthor­itarian regime to liberal democracy. Four years earlier Vladimir Putin had declared in a speech in German to the Bundestag, “Russia is a friendlymi­nded European country.” The then chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, Mrs Merkel’s predecesso­r, became so chummy with Mr Putin that shortly before leaving office he approved the constructi­on of a gas pipeline from Russia to Germany crossing the Baltic Sea. Russia provided 40% of Germany’s gas. Germany was about to become Russia’s largest trading partner.

Sixteen years later, each country’s expectatio­n of the other has failed to materialis­e. Germany had imagined a more liberal Russia; Russia had hoped that Germany would help convince Europe to treat Russia as an equal, and to create a freetrade zone from Lisbon to Vladivosto­k. On August 20th Mrs Merkel will travel to Moscow during the last weeks of her chancellor­ship to say goodbye to a leader whom she has come to distrust deeply. Mr Putin will bid farewell to his most important interlocut­or among Western leaders.

The debacle in Afghanista­n will be high on their list, as well as the nearly finished gas pipeline, which America’s Congress fiercely opposes. Now known as Nord Stream 2, it has become a stain on Mrs Merkel’s legacy. The chancellor is normally adept at balancing competing interests, but she utterly underestim­ated how much the pipeline, which she supported mainly to appease the business lobby and her Social Democratic coalition partners, would upset America and Ukraine. They fear it will isolate Ukraine (which also stands to lose lucrative transit fees) and make Europe even more dependent on Russian gas. After her stop in Moscow Mrs Merkel will travel to Kyiv for talks with Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president.

Pundits differ on whether the turningpoi­nt in GermanRuss­ian relations was Mr Putin’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, the Kremlindir­ected hacking of the Bundestag’s computer systems in 2015 or the killing in 2019 of a Chechen dissident in a Berlin park. Yet all agree that the poisoning last year of Alexei Navalny, the Kremlin’s leading opponent, was the last straw. “GermanRuss­ia relations are at the lowest point since the end of the cold war, and they will deteriorat­e further still,” says Stefan Meister of the dgap, a thinktank in Berlin. Mr Putin uses the conflict with the West to drum up nationalis­t support for his regime. He will become even more authoritar­ian, predicts Mr Meister, by increasing pressure on Russian media and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons.

According to Andrey Kortunov, the head of the Russian Internatio­nal Affairs Council, a foreignaffairs thinktank in Moscow, the Russian government has no desire to increase tensions with Germany. It expects continuity with Mrs Merkel’s policies if Armin Laschet, her party’s candidate, becomes the next chancellor. If, however, the next chancellor is the Greens’ Annalena Baerbock, who opposes Nord Stream 2, Germany looks likely to get tougher with Russia. Either way, long gone are the toocosy days of Mr Schröder, who once called Mr Putin a “flawless democrat”, and who is now the chairman of both Rosneft, Russia’s statecontr­olled oil company, and Nord Stream 2. n

 ?? ?? Why did it all go wrong?
Why did it all go wrong?

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