{"id":4956,"date":"2025-10-09T19:50:11","date_gmt":"2025-10-09T19:50:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/?p=4956"},"modified":"2025-10-13T18:41:35","modified_gmt":"2025-10-13T18:41:35","slug":"fyodor-lukyanov-western-europe-should-stop-looking-for-moscows-hand-and-face-up-to-its-own-decline","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/10\/09\/fyodor-lukyanov-western-europe-should-stop-looking-for-moscows-hand-and-face-up-to-its-own-decline\/","title":{"rendered":"Fyodor Lukyanov: Western Europe should stop looking for \u2018Moscow\u2019s hand\u2019 and face up to its own decline"},"content":{"rendered":"
The age of Western moralising is over \u2014 the world is now truly multipolar<\/strong><\/p>\n Every October, the Valdai Discussion Club gathers as a kind of intellectual weather vane for global politics. This year’s 22nd session, titled: ‘The Polycentric World: Instructions for Use’, felt less like a debate than a diagnosis – the world has crossed a threshold. Multipolarity is no longer an emerging idea; it is the reality we inhabit.<\/p>\n The leitmotif of Valdai 2025 came from President Vladimir Putin himself, in words directed toward Western Europe: “Calm down, sleep peacefully, and deal with your own problems.”<\/em> It was both a rebuke and a reminder – that the age of blaming Moscow for every domestic failure should be over, and that the real crises of the West lie within.<\/p>\n For years, Valdai was seen as an intermezzo – a pause between acts in the great geopolitical performance. That illusion is gone. The ‘polycentric world’ has ceased to be a hypothesis. There will be no return to unipolarity, no revival of Western tutelage over global affairs. The emerging order may still be turbulent and uncertain, but it is now the order – fluid, competitive, and irreversible.<\/p>\n Putin’s address captured this new mood. His message was pragmatic, even philosophical: The world’s problems are too grave to waste energy on fabricated conflicts and imaginary threats. “There are so many objective problems – natural, technological, social – that expending energy on artificial contradictions is impermissible, wasteful, and simply foolish,”<\/em> he said.<\/p>\n This is less about ideology than survival. In an age of cascading crises – climate shocks, economic dislocation, wars of information and infrastructure – the call is for sobriety. And it is Western Europeans, more than anyone, that seem in need of it.<\/p>\n Putin’s remarks to the Western Europeans was not mere trolling; it was diagnostic. The region, once confident in its civilizational mission, now frets about Moscow’s ‘hand’ in everything from elections to farm protests. The paranoia betrays insecurity – a subconscious awareness that the region’s problems are largely homemade: Demographic decline, deindustrialization, energy dependence, and political exhaustion.<\/p>\n Russia has moved on from this drama. The Kremlin no longer seeks Western validation or fears Western reproach. The conversation has shifted toward Asia, the Global South, and ‘the rest of the nations’ now forming their own centers of gravity. The world has ceased revolving around Washington and Brussels.<\/p>\nThe West looks inward – but too late <\/h2>\n