The upcoming G-7 summit in Germany. (IANS) 
World

G-7 invitation not meant to "splinter" nations from Russia

The US has dismissed suggestions that the invitation to India and other countries to the upcoming G-7 summit in Germany was intended to splinter them from Russia.

NewsGram Desk

The US has dismissed suggestions that the invitation to India and other countries to the upcoming G-7 summit in Germany was intended to splinter them from Russia.

India, Indonesia, South Africa, Senegal, Argentina, and Ukraine have been invited to the summit as guests at certain sessions.

India has been attending these summits at the invitation of the host countries for years now, going back to the G-8 summit in Gleneagles in Scotland in 2005. Russia was the eighth member; it was thrown out of the group after it attacked Ukraine in 2014 and annexed Crimea.

Withstanding pressure from the US and other western nations, India has refused to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine citing historic ties with Moscow and dependence on Russia for military hardware. And South Africa abstained in a UN vote to throw out Russia from the world body's Human Rights Council.

"It is not about trying to splinter them off or coax them away from any other association or partnership that they might have with another country," said John Kirby, National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications at the White House, at a news briefing.

G7 summit, (and) from NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg. (Wikimedia Commons)

"That's not the goal here. The goal is to unify around a set of common principles and initiatives."

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will attend the summit at Schloss Elmau at the invitation of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. He is expected to attend two sessions that include environment, energy, climate, food security, health, gender equality, and democracy.

There is no further information about his bilateral meetings. Going by past practice, he is likely to have several and one of the most widely watched will be that with the US President Joe Biden, whatever the format -- a pull-aside, a longer one-on-one, or a meeting along with their respective teams.

The star presence at the summit is likely to be Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. He is expected to attend, on what could be possibly his first official trip abroad since the Russian invasion in February.

"I gratefully accepted the invitation of my Western partners to take part in key international events: from German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to the G7 summit, (and) from NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the NATO summit in Madrid," Zelensky wrote in a recent tweet.

Will Modi meet Zelensky?

There is no word on it yet. But a meeting of the two leaders will be significant. The Modi government has yet to condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine, though it has made its opposition to it abundantly clear. It is also carrying the burden of India's historic ties with the former Soviet Union.

Kirby was also asked about India and South Africa attending an ongoing meeting of BRICS hosted by China. He dismissed the question that he will let the participating countries speak for their reasons.

"Those countries can speak for themselves, and it's not the first time that they have gotten together," he said. (AA/IANS)

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