Putin can’t count on his friends in Italy anymore
Russia-loving Silvio Berlusconi is dead and Italy’s
new leader Giorgia Meloni is Joe Biden’s ally now.
BY HANNAH
ROBERTS, JONATHAN LEMIRE AND ELI STOKOLS
JULY 27,
2023 4:00 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-giorgia-meloni-relationship-russia-italy-not-friends/
When
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni walks into the Oval Office on Thursday,
her transformation will be complete.
Gone is the
ghoulish caricature of an extremist monster, sympathetic to Moscow, whose party
was descended from fascists, and in her place stands a pragmatic conservative
willing to do business with a grateful international mainstream.
For U.S.
President Joe Biden and Ukraine’s backers in the West, securing Meloni’s
long-term commitment to the war effort is vital: Italy will assume the
leadership of the G7 next year, at what’s likely to be a critical time in the
conflict.
Initially,
the signs weren’t good. Before she was elected last September, Meloni alarmed
officials in Western capitals with her blunt brand of far-right populism. She
banged the drum for nationalist causes, vowing to slam the brakes on
immigration, stand up to the European Union’s leadership in Brussels and even
opposed sanctioning Russia over Ukraine.
Yet 10
months since Meloni won power, the picture has changed dramatically. She will
receive VIP treatment at the White House Thursday, with a welcome from Biden
that will be as sincere as for any other G7 ally. While the Democrat and the
far-right populist share almost nothing in their political outlooks, their
handshake is likely to be one of mutual relief.
Meloni’s
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, leader of the center-right Forza Italia party,
told POLITICO that the Ukraine war had bolstered Italy’s relationship with the
U.S. The Meloni government’s “three polar stars” are now the EU, the U.N. and
NATO, he said.
“Italy is
part of the Western alliance and wants to be a protagonist in the Western
alliance and in particular in its alliance with the U.S.A.,” Tajani said.
“Since the crisis in Ukraine, our relationship on issues of security and shared
policy with the U.S.A. has been getting stronger.”
Putin’s pals
It is a far
cry from the sort of rhetoric that had, until recently, emanated from Rome.
As leader
of the hard right Brothers of Italy, she supported Putin’s strongman politics
while in opposition, congratulating him after his re-election by saying “the
will of the people appears unequivocal.”
After
Moscow’s 2014 invasion of Crimea she repeatedly opposed sanctions against
Russia, citing the need to protect Italian exports. During the pandemic Meloni
endorsed Russia’s Sputnik vaccines. In a TV interview in 2022 before Russia’s
full-scale invasion of Ukraine, she highlighted how essential it was to remain
on good terms with Putin and accused Biden of “using foreign policy to cover up
the problems he has at home.”
If Meloni
seemed like a problem to Western leaders, her coalition partners were an even
worse prospect. Matteo Salvini, leader of the right wing League, who once wore
a T-shirt printed with Putin’s face to the EU Parliament, attempted to arrange
a peace mission to Moscow with flights paid by the Russian embassy.
And
Meloni’s coalition partner Silvio Berlusconi, who led the center-right Forza
Italia party until his death in June, blamed Ukraine for the war and had a
personal friendship with Vladimir Putin, continuing to exchange gifts with the
Russian leader even after the invasion.
When she
took power, there were deep, if private, fears within the White House,
according to several Biden administration officials who were granted anonymity
to speak candidly, that Meloni might shatter the G7 support for Ukraine.
But Meloni
surprised U.S. officials at the G7 summit in Hiroshima in May with just how
eager she seemed to build a strong relationship with Biden, according to two
government officials who witnessed their interactions.
At the NATO
summit earlier this month in Vilnius, Meloni stood just a few feet from both
Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy when the G7 nations announced
additional security guarantees for Kyiv that were meant as something of a
make-good after NATO declined to fast-track Ukraine’s membership.
At the NATO
summit earlier this month in Vilnius, Meloni stood just a few feet from both
Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy | Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty
Images
With Italy
set to take over the presidency of the G7 in January, Meloni’s support for the
cause has prompted sighs of relief from both sides of the Atlantic.
“The
President and the Prime Minister have built a good, productive relationship as
they have worked together closely on a variety of issues such as our support
for Ukraine and our approach to China, and President Biden is looking forward
to continuing that conversation,” said Adrienne Watson, a spokesperson for
Biden’s national security council.
Pleasantly surprised
Biden has
told those around him he has been pleasantly surprised by Meloni’s leadership
in the war effort but is eager to get to know the Italian leader better,
according to multiple administration officials.
For
Alessandro Politi, Director of the NATO Defense College Foundation in Rome,
Meloni “understood very quickly that when you get into government you have
responsibilities and the U.S.A. is a primary ally.”
Her visit
to Kyiv in February was a clear sign she was following “an orthodox path” and a
moment when “she convinced the wider international community that she was in
charge of the coalition and that her allies had to follow her political line.”
Meloni’s
support for the Western stance does not mean the whole of Italy feels the same
way.
Some
populists on both the left and right of Italian politics still hold pro-Russian
views, and the question of whether it’s right to send arms to Ukraine elicits
fierce debate in the media. Italy’s longstanding position on Russia has always
been to try to act as a bridge, facilitating good relations between East and
West.
But
although a majority of Italians are opposed to it, Meloni has continued to back
Ukraine with military aid. Ukrainians are “defending freedom and democracy on
which our civilization is based,” she told the Italian Senate in March.
While Biden
and Meloni are likely to agree on Ukraine, it is not certain that they will be
in harmony on all issues.
In 2019
Italy became the only G7 country to join China’s Belt and Road global
infrastructure initiative. Later this year it is up for renewal, but in the new
cold war climate the U.S. expects the deal to be scrapped.
While
Meloni has indicated that she might not extend the agreement with Beijing,
calling it “a big mistake,” this position is not yet confirmed. If she does
return to the more traditional Italian line of walking a middle ground, the
cracks in the Biden-Meloni relationship will open up again.
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