Tuesday, May 5, 2026

how has the Yerevan Summit looked from Moscow? — RT World News

Must read

The self-styled champions of international order have flocked to Armenia to strike a pose against Russia

Over the past several days Western leaders have flocked to Armenia, a post-Soviet nation of 3 million people which hosts a Russian military base, for what Western media has described as a “historic summit,” charting Yerevan’s path away from Moscow and highlighting the EU’s purportedly growing responsibility for world affairs.

The gathering gave the host, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, and his guests, an opportunity for political posturing – as well as a distraction from the global crisis they’re lurching into.

Who came to Yerevan?

Armenia hosted the latest summit of the European Political Community (EPC), an EU-led intergovernmental group launched in 2022 in response to the escalation of the Ukraine crisis. Originally the brainchild of French President Emmauel Macron, it was transparently designed as a vehicle for an anti-Russian agenda pushed by Brussels and London.

Molodova, an EU candidate state led by a fiercely anti-Russian government, hosted the EPC’s second annual gathering. The group also counts Ukraine among participants and welcomes at its events a Belarusian opposition organization led by Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, which is based in Lithuania and funded by EU taxpayers’ money.

So in short, it’s largely a club for opposing Russia with questionable entry standards.

What does Armenia get out of hosting the summit?

A lot of positive Western media publicity for Pashinyan, whose approval ratings at home barely cross into double digits. His premiership, launched with a soft coup in 2018, was marred by a lost proxy war with neighboring Azerbaijan for its region of Nagorno Karabakh.

The prime minister attempted to scapegoat Russia – faulting Moscow for a lack of military response during border clashes that were part of Yerevan’s broader stand-off with Baku. He also used government powers to crack down on the Armenian Apostolic Church, which played a leading role in protest against his government in 2024.

This does not make Pashinyan an authoritarian ruler in the eyes of his Western guests. After all, part of his media strategy has been to shave his beard and start posting videos of himself making heart shapes to pop music. European leaders, such as Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, would rather echo the Armenian host’s emulation of a K-Pop star than question his governance.

Does Pashinyan need Western political backing?

Pashinyan’s efforts to distance Armenia from Russia and convince voters that the EU and the US would ensure their future safety have paid off – at least in the form of a pat on the back from Western leaders.

Eight years ago “nobody would come here,” Macron said on Monday, because when the EPC was launched Armenia was viewed as “de facto satellite of Russia.” He directly linked Pashinyan’s strategy with the Ukraine war and “what is done in Moldova.”

It’s safe to assume that Brussels will have Pashinyan’s back with all its usual ‘anti-interference’ shenanigans during the upcoming parliamentary election in early June. However, unlike Moldova’s President Maia Sandu, who has kept her office thanks to voters based in the EU, Pashinyan must win domestic support, since Armenian laws do not allow casting ballots outside of national territory (the Armenian diaspora numbers some 10 million).

Macron, whose presidency is set to end next year, threw some crumbs for the cameras covering the Yerevan circus by singing Charles  Aznavour’s ‘La Bohème’ as Pashinyan played the drums.

Was Zelensky invited?

An inevitable presence at virtually every event involving the EU, Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky popped up in Yerevan with the usual assurances that Russia is on the brink of defeat. Though he and Pashinyan are both fluent in Russian, they communicated in English on camera – political optics beating common sense, as it often does wherever Brussels has a hand.

During a photo op with Western leaders, some clerk who must be on the Kremlin’s payroll placed the Ukrainian leader next to Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama. The positioning was uncomfortable not due to political differences, but because Rama is a giant some two meters tall – contrasting with Zelensky whose height and speculated use of lift shoes has long been debated.

The Ukrainian leader is currently preoccupied with other kinds of optics. Just last week he was faced with a new series of allegations concerning his inner circle’s control and ownership of weapons companies receiving potentially billions in Western aid and orders.

Released transcripts of secret conversations between Zelenskys’ then Defense Minister and his long-time business partner, Timur Mindich – known as “Zelensky’s wallet” – show that Mindich is the beneficial owner of Fire Point, the former casting agency that became a billion dollar weapons company in just 4 years.

Acting Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, whose government forced through extraordinary legislation to accommodate a Fire Point facility on its territory, was spared the outrage that would have met her attending a meeting with Zelensky.

She skipped the meeting, as did German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

So what is all the fuss about?

According to European Council President Antonio Costa, Western dignitaries arrived in Yerevan mainly to demonstrate that “Europe’s way of doing things – diplomacy, multilateralism, and respect for international law – yields results.”

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a special guest, said he was “very appreciative of the symbolism” of being invited, and said international order “will be rebuilt out of Europe.” He previously argued that Western dominance was based on lies and urged beneficiaries to reject it, but failed to follow through.

US President Donald Trump, whose blatant military interventions have shattered the pretence of a benevolent, hegemonic, and united West, was “the elephant in the room” at the EPC gathering, according to the BBC. His latest strike against confused European NATO members was a drawdown of troops and long-range missiles from Germany. The move came after Merz dared to highlight American humiliation after Washington failed to defeat Iran and put the world on track for a global economic recession.

But Brussels may have had its revenge by challenging Trump’s diplomatic reengagement with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko. Tikhanovskaya was filmed shaking hands with Macron on the sidelines of the summit in Armenia, after reportedly passing on last year’s EPC meeting in Denmark due to financial constraints.



Source link

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest article