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Merkel and Putin: A Long History of Distrust and Reconciliation | Merkel and Putin: A Long History of Distrust and Reconciliation |
(about 11 hours later) | |
BERLIN — The personal relationship between Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia is often boiled down to certain anecdotes: her put-downs about his role in the K.G.B., and his attempts to rattle her by bringing his large black Labrador to a meeting, knowing her fear of dogs. | |
But the two countries’ long history of alienation and rapprochement was also at play when Ms. Merkel and Mr. Putin sat down for talks on Saturday in the German government’s villa outside Berlin — influencing, and possibly limiting, the outcome of the meeting. | |
Before talks began, the two leaders addressed reporters, but took no questions. They said stability in Ukraine and Syria and the future of the Iran nuclear deal were the top international issues on their agenda. Bilateral relations focusing on energy and the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline would also be discussed, they said. | |
“Germany, but especially Russia, as a member of the U.N. Security Council, has a responsibility to find solutions,” Ms. Merkel said. “I am of the opinion that controversial issues can only be addressed in dialogue, and through dialogue.” | |
Many experts saw the meeting as a chance to put the relationship between Berlin and Moscow on more pragmatic ground. But few expected the session to end with strong resolutions or a new strategic partnership. | |
Here’s a look at some of the issues that define and influence German-Russian ties and the leaders’ discussions. | |
The two countries could be described as the ultimate international “frenemies,” with economic, cultural and intellectual ties reaching back centuries. Since the 18th century, they have cycled through a series of conflicts and reconciliations, most recently World War II and the Cold War. | The two countries could be described as the ultimate international “frenemies,” with economic, cultural and intellectual ties reaching back centuries. Since the 18th century, they have cycled through a series of conflicts and reconciliations, most recently World War II and the Cold War. |
Throughout the Soviet era, Germany was Moscow’s most important trading partner, and many Germans view the strong, positive ties to Moscow as a key contributor to the end of the Cold War and German reunification. When the Berlin Wall fell, Germany reached out to Moscow, partly to help the departing Soviet bloc countries integrate into the European Union, not only strengthening political and economic ties, but also investing in civil society. | |
But a break in relations that started with the Russian authorities’ repressive reaction to public protests in 2011 and 2012 worsened in 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and supported rebels in eastern Ukraine. | But a break in relations that started with the Russian authorities’ repressive reaction to public protests in 2011 and 2012 worsened in 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and supported rebels in eastern Ukraine. |
Ms. Merkel and Mr. Putin have still maintained regular contact. In May, the chancellor visited the Russian president at his summer residence in Sochi and she told reporters she saw Saturday’s meeting as a continuation of those talks. | |
But Susan Stewart, a senior associate with the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, cautioned that the leaders’ meeting in Germany should not be viewed as a fundamental shift in German-Russian relations. Instead, it reflects hope that the two sides can compromise on Syria, energy and other key issues, while maintaining their differences over Russia’s role in the conflict in Ukraine. | |
“They will be trying a two-pronged approach,” Ms. Stewart said ahead of the meeting. “They will try to cooperate on those points where there is a common interest, but we will not see a return to business as usual.” | |
Both Germany and Russia have problems tied to Syria. | |
For Ms. Merkel, the issue is domestic. Her decision to allow more than one million people — most of them refugees from the war in Syria — to apply for asylum in Germany has been met with increasing resistance from the public and from her own government. | |
For Mr. Putin, it is not being quite able to find a solution to Syria’s civil war, in which he intervened militarily to prop up President Bashar al-Assad against the rebel groups seeking his demise. | |
Both leaders could benefit from finding a way to ensure sufficient political stability in Syria to allow Germany to begin encouraging refugees to return, while Mr. Putin is seeking support from Berlin and the European Union to help rebuild the country, said Stefan Meister of the German Council on Foreign Relations. | Both leaders could benefit from finding a way to ensure sufficient political stability in Syria to allow Germany to begin encouraging refugees to return, while Mr. Putin is seeking support from Berlin and the European Union to help rebuild the country, said Stefan Meister of the German Council on Foreign Relations. |
“It is in the domestic political interest of the German government that Syrian refugees be able to return to a stable Syria,” Mr. Meister said. | “It is in the domestic political interest of the German government that Syrian refugees be able to return to a stable Syria,” Mr. Meister said. |
On Saturday, Mr. Putin said he would like Germany’s help in rebuilding Syria’s infrastructure so refugees would be able to return. “We must restore the supply of water and the sewage system,” along with access to medicine, he said. “These are the most basic things in which I think everyone is interested, including Europe.” | |
Russia was surprised by Germany’s willingness to throw its full weight behind American sanctions on Moscow over its annexation of Crimea, its involvement in the pro-Kremlin insurgency in eastern Ukraine and the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. | |
The move made clear to Russian leaders that the special relationship they believed they had shared with Berlin was over. Soon afterward, Germany found itself in the cross-hairs of Russian cyberattacks and a campaign in the Russian news media that caused Germany to plunge in Russian public opinion. | The move made clear to Russian leaders that the special relationship they believed they had shared with Berlin was over. Soon afterward, Germany found itself in the cross-hairs of Russian cyberattacks and a campaign in the Russian news media that caused Germany to plunge in Russian public opinion. |
“If you look at the image of Germany — and Merkel in particular — in Russian political discourse, you will see that it really has deteriorated tremendously,” said Sabine Fischer, head researcher on Eastern Europe at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. | “If you look at the image of Germany — and Merkel in particular — in Russian political discourse, you will see that it really has deteriorated tremendously,” said Sabine Fischer, head researcher on Eastern Europe at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. |
A survey cited on Friday by Vedomosti, a Russian business daily, reflected this trend, showing approval of Ms. Merkel among Russians plummeting to 15 percent in August 2016 from 60 percent in February 2011. | |
But to break out of its international isolation, Russia needs Germany’s support. It hopes to persuade the chancellor not to support a new round of sanctions that President Trump has threatened to impose over the poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter in Britain. | |
“There is a need for more pragmatic action at the political level,” Ms. Fischer said. | “There is a need for more pragmatic action at the political level,” Ms. Fischer said. |
Germany imports about 40 percent of its natural gas from Russia, according to government statistics. That is more than any other European Union country, but less than the 60 percent to 70 percent that President Trump cited when he accused Germany of being a “captive” of Russia at a NATO summit meeting last month. | Germany imports about 40 percent of its natural gas from Russia, according to government statistics. That is more than any other European Union country, but less than the 60 percent to 70 percent that President Trump cited when he accused Germany of being a “captive” of Russia at a NATO summit meeting last month. |
“That comment clearly taps into a stereotype in Washington that because of its economic ties, Germany is ‘weaker’ on Russia,” said Derek Chollet, an adviser on security and defense policy with the German Marshall Fund in Washington. | “That comment clearly taps into a stereotype in Washington that because of its economic ties, Germany is ‘weaker’ on Russia,” said Derek Chollet, an adviser on security and defense policy with the German Marshall Fund in Washington. |
Mr. Putin rattled off a list of statistics on Saturday that speak to the strength of the two countries’ economic ties, among them a 22 percent increase in trade in 2017, to $55 billion. He also addressed the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which was at the heart of Mr. Trump’s claim, insisting that it was needed to “meet the European economy’s growing demand for energy resources.” | |
“I want to emphasize again that Nord Stream 2 is a solely economic project and it closes no opportunities for transit shipments via Ukrainian territory,” Mr. Putin said. | |
Former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder’s close relationship to Mr. Putin and his decision to join the board of Russia’s state oil company, Rosneft, has only bolstered that notion that Germany is beholden to Russia. | |
But Ms. Merkel has shown a willingness to draw a line, with her decisions to support sanctions against Russia in 2015 and to join the coordinated response to the poisoning in Britain this spring. | |
“My sense is Merkel, who in her own way makes clear that she understands the Russians and Putin as a type as well as anyone, has no illusions about Russia or Putin and their motives,” Mr. Chollet said. | “My sense is Merkel, who in her own way makes clear that she understands the Russians and Putin as a type as well as anyone, has no illusions about Russia or Putin and their motives,” Mr. Chollet said. |