INA- SOURCES
Former German chancellor Angela Merkel has defended her record on Russia, saying she had “nothing to apologise for” even as Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine casts a shadow over her legacy.
Merkel insisted she had not been naive in her dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin who she met regularly during her 16 years in office.
“Diplomacy isn’t wrong just because it hasn’t worked,” the 67-year-old said in her first major interview since stepping down six months ago.
She recalled her support for economic sanctions against Russia over its 2014 annexation of Crimea, and German-French efforts to keep the Minsk peace process for Ukraine alive.
“I don’t have to blame myself for not trying hard enough,” the conservative ex-chancellor said.
“I don’t see that I have to say ‘that was wrong’ and that’s why I have nothing to apologise for.”
Speaking to Der Spiegel journalist Alexander Osang, she rejected criticism that she had been wrong to block Ukraine from joining NATO in 2008, arguing that Ukraine was too divided at that point and Putin would have seen membership as a “declaration of war”.
“We simply didn’t succeed in creating a security architecture to prevent that,” she added.
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