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Ukraine war: G7 leaders pledge action on Russia – do we believe them?

Ukraine war: G7 leaders pledge action on Russia – do we believe them?

Boris Johnson’s joke calls for fellow leaders from the seven richest countries in the world – G7 – plus the European Union, to show that some serious muscles have become a prominent moment at their meeting at German luxury hotels.

The British Prime Minister is clearly mocking Vladimir Putin from Russia, who is famous for liking naked horses for cameras

The Prime Minister of Canada and the Head of the European Union Commission wholeheartedly joined the moment of Ha-ha.

Kremlin, meanwhile, is increasing his deadly attack in Ukraine. The world food crisis spreads as a result of Russian blockade about the seeds of Ukraine, which are needed in Africa and the Middle East. Food and fuel prices also rotate throughout Europe.

But Mr. Johnson is also true. Now is the time when Western leaders and their allies must make a serious impact if they want to fight Russian aggression and the Fair Chinese weather in a meaningful way.

Voters who are increasingly anxious and surrounded by these G7 countries and their allies may find jokes and pose for awkward photos that are more easily accepted – even welcomed – if they produce concrete actions.
Eu leaders gathered in Brussels before the weekend and the G7 Summit was running smoothly in the Bavarian Mountains, while other world leaders had arrived in Madrid for what was collected as the “Most Important” meeting of the NATO defense alliance for years.

In the past, this annual meeting has been dismissed as a speaking shop, filled with vague promises, which cause too often. Think of the initiative build back better world, which was announced in G7 last year, for example.

Now in Bavaria, the G7 has announced the $ 600 billion infrastructure plan (£ 490 billion), especially those aimed at developing countries to fight the global influences that spread in China.

The leaders also promised new sanctions to Moscow to limit their ability to import technology for the weapons industry. This, in addition, the possibility of price limits on Russian oil exports, designed to hit the Kremlin war coffin hard. But this is an initiative that can only work if enough country, and the largest economy in the world, is on ships.

Ukraine President Zelensky is of course aimed at placing leaders in a mass place this week. The message: Giving a stronger weapon to us faster “if you are a true partner, not just an observer.”

In order to be credible, this week’s NATO meeting will require the strength and western allies, (Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand have been invited as observers) to nail together in Russia.

Washington was worried that the West defended the unity front. Arriving in Bavaria, President Biden insisted that G7 and NATO countries must “stay together” in the face of the Russian invasion.

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