After talks with Putin, ex-Chancellor Schröder believes in the possibility of a ceasefire. He recommends the commissioning of Nord Stream 2 and sees no reason to distance himself from Putin.
After talks in Moscow, former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder expressed his confidence that Russia would seek a “negotiated solution” in the war against Ukraine.
The recently reached agreement between the warring parties on grain exports from Ukraine is an “initial success” that could perhaps “slowly be expanded into a ceasefire,” said the SPD member in an interview with “Stern” magazine and the broadcaster “RTL/ntv”.
He met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow last week. “The good news is that the Kremlin wants a negotiated solution,” said Schröder.
Schröder: Crimea lost to Kyiv
It was “a big mistake to denigrate possible concessions by Ukraine as a Russian “dictated peace” in advance,” said Schröder. He said that the really relevant problems could be solved, including a compromise for the Donbass region in eastern Ukraine and the question of a possible “armed neutrality” for Ukraine as an alternative to NATO membership.
Schröder emphasized in the interview that he believed that the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea – which Russia had annexed in 2014 – was lost to Kyiv. “The notion that the Ukrainian President [Wolodymyr] Zelenskyy recaptured Crimea militarily is absurd,” he said. “Who seriously believes that a Russian president could ever give up Crimea again?”
Schröder expressly praised the mediation efforts of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the conflict. “But it won’t work without a yes from Washington,” said Schröder, referring to the US government’s position.
“If things get really tight, there’s this pipeline”
In view of the gas crisis, Schröder also recommends the commissioning of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. “It’s ready. When things get really tight, there is this pipeline, and with both Nord Stream pipelines there would be no supply problem for German industry and German households .” Schröder described the commissioning of Nord Stream 2 as the “simplest solution” in view of possible gas bottlenecks.
Schröder is President of the Board of Directors at Nord Stream 2. After the start of the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine, the federal government ruled out the commissioning of Nord Stream 2. Recently, seven mayors of the Baltic Sea island of Rügen spoke out in favor of using the pipeline.
“If you don’t want to use Nord Stream 2, you have to bear the consequences. And they will also be huge in Germany,” said Schröder. Anyone who heats with gas is already feeling the effects. “It’s uncomfortable for us who are sitting here, but it’s manageable. But for a lot of people who have to count on every cent, it’s going to be really hard. And then people in Germany will ask: why are we actually doing without the gas from the Nord Stream 2 pipeline? Why?”
Schröder does not want to distance himself from Putin
Despite the Russian war against Ukraine, Schröder sees no reason to distance himself from Russian President Vladimir Putin. “I have repeatedly condemned the war, you know that. But would a personal distancing from Vladimir Putin really do anyone any good?” Schröder asked in an interview with the magazine “Stern” and the broadcaster “RTL/ntv” (Wednesday). “Do I have to jump over every stick that’s held out to me? I’m not like that. I’ve made decisions, and I stand by them, and I made it clear: maybe I can be useful again. So why should I apologize?” , Schroeder added.
The former chancellor has long been criticized for his closeness to Putin and the Russian oil and gas industry. When asked in the interview that if you distanced yourself you would at least know where he stood morally, the 78-year-old replied: “Oh, that’s crazy. Look, I’m a member of a golf club near Hanover. There’s a other member complains because he has to see me there from time to time. But I also get a lot of letters from Germany that say: It’s good that there is still someone who is keeping channels of communication open with Russia in the current conflict.”
Decision on Schröder’s future in the SPD is near
The former chancellor has long been criticized for his closeness to Putin and the Russian oil and gas industry. Schröder once again described the war as a “mistake by the Russian government”, but at the same time defended his contacts with Moscow. “But why would I stop having conversations that are legal and won’t get me and my family in trouble?” he asked in the interview.
In the coming days, the arbitration commission of the SPD sub-district Region Hannover wants to decide on a possible party expulsion. However, the legal hurdles for a party penalty or even an exclusion are very high.
Source: Stern

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