La Semana

Brazil’s welcome of Russian minister prompts US blowback

- By PATRICK WHITTLE

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Monday expressed gratitude to Brazil for its approach in pushing for an end to hostilitie­s in Ukraine — an effort that has irked both Kyiv and the West, and by afternoon prompted an unusually sharp rebuke from the White House.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has refused to provide weapons to Ukraine while proposing a club of nations including Brazil and China to mediate peace.

On Sunday, Lula told reporters in Abu Dhabi that two nations – both Russia and Ukraine – had decided to go to war, and a day earlier in Beijing said the U.S. must stop “stimulatin­g” the continued Cghting and start discussing peace. Earlier this month, he suggested Ukraine could cede Crimea to end the war, which the spokespers­on for Ukraine’s foreign ministry, Oleg Nikolenko, and others rejected.

After meeting Brazil’s foreign minister on Monday, Lavrov told reporters in a short press conference that the West has engaged in “a rather tough struggle” to maintain its dominance in world affairs, including economics and geopolitic­s.

“As for the process in Ukraine, we are grateful to our Brazilian friends for their excellent understand­ing of this situation’s genesis. We are grateful (to them) for striving to contribute to Cnding ways to settle it,” Lavrov said, sitting alongside his Brazilian counterpar­t, Mauro Vieira.

Lula’s recent comments, particular­ly ascribing any blame to Ukraine for Russia’s invasion in Feb. 2022, run counter to the position held by the European Union, the U.S. and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. And any talk of a ceasecre is viewed as an opportunit­y for Russia to regroup its forces for a new offensive. Zelenskyy told The Associated Press last month that a loss anywhere at this stage in the war could put Ukraine’s hardfought momentum at risk.

Vieira, for his part, told reporters that Brazil sees sanctions against Russia as causing negative impacts for the global economy, particular­ly developing nations, and that Brazil supports an immediate ceasecre in Ukraine.

Following the meeting, National Security Council spokespers­on John Kirby blasted Brazil’s approach to the war and for its o3cials having met Lavrov and Russia’s Vladimir Putin in person, while thus far only speaking to Ukrainian o3cials by phone.

“Brazil has substantiv­ely and rhetorical­ly approached this issue by suggesting that the United States and Europe are somehow not interested in peace or that we share responsibi­lity for the war,” Kirby told reporters in Washington. “In this case, Brazil is parroting Russian and Chinese propaganda without at all looking at the facts.”

Kirby said the Biden administra­tion hoped Lula and others will urge the Russians “to cease the bombing of Ukrainian cities, hospitals and schools, halt the war crimes and the atrocities and, quite frankly, to pull back Russian forces from Ukraine.”

Both foreign ministers were meeting with Lula in the afternoon.

As part of his effort to end the war, Lula also has withheld munitions to Ukraine, despite a request from Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Lula has said that sending supplies would mean Brazil entering the war, which he seeks to end.

His administra­tion is seeking to simultaneo­usly develop ties with China, Europe and the U.S. while keeping an open door to Russia. However, his recent remarks may have undermined his effort to secure these competing objectives, said Christophe­r Garman, managing director for the Americas at political risk consultanc­y Eurasia Group.

“It’s not a good look, when you have the Russian chancellor side by side, and it’s the Russian position,” Garman said by phone. “The optics do diminish Brazil’s credibilit­y as an independen­t arbiter, but I think that the import is larger precisely because of the current storms that Lula stoked with his comments in China and the UAE.”

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