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Report
G20 'achieves consensus on diverse points of view amid changing of economic philosophy across world'
FRANCE 24 English
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1 year ago
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00:00
The G20, which, by the way, included a sidebar meeting between France's president and India's
00:05
prime minister.
00:06
India, which at the time of spiraling superpower tensions is both a member of the Quad, a security
00:12
grouping that includes Australia, India, Japan, and the U.S., but also the BRICS, powered
00:17
by Russia and China.
00:19
Our guest is completing a four-year stint as Delhi's man in Paris, outgoing Indian ambassador
00:25
to France, Jawed Ashraf.
00:27
Thank you for speaking with us here.
00:28
Thank you for having me.
00:29
Good evening.
00:31
These are changing times.
00:34
You're departing in a moment of transition in Washington, and it feels like a moment
00:39
of uncertainty globally.
00:42
There was a G20 summit last year in India.
00:44
A lot has changed since when we just saw wrap up in Rio.
00:48
Well, thank you very much.
00:50
It is, I think, not just because of the election in the United States that it's a period of
00:55
change.
00:56
We are witnessing sweeping changes in politics, in geopolitics, economics, technology, shifting
01:03
equations between countries, weakening of international order for quite a while.
01:08
Also, I think a changing of economic philosophy in the world, across the world.
01:13
Those who are the architects, I think, of the international order as we know it are
01:17
no longer interested in it.
01:18
In some cases, they are actually quite opposed to it, as we see now.
01:23
Now, I think what we saw in G20, though, I'd say is something very positive.
01:28
I think you must recognize in this time of fractious time, there is a great deal of unity,
01:33
at least cohesion, and getting a consensus.
01:36
And I think the Delhi G20 summit was instrumental in saving G20 from collapsing because we did
01:42
achieve a consensus when no one expected it.
01:45
Consensus on what?
01:47
Consensus on actually getting a statement that reflected diverse points of view.
01:53
And this is important because G20 is perhaps today the only platform globally where leaders
01:58
of major countries from diverse geographies, from different circumstances are actually
02:02
coming together to debate on a whole set of issues and then set directions for the future.
02:08
And you would recall that last year there was a lot of concern whether because of Ukraine
02:11
there would even be a consensus and that whether politics will derail the original objective
02:16
of G20, which is to shape the direction of the world towards a more prosperous, inclusive
02:21
future.
02:22
And I think G20 achieved that last year in saving the future of G20 and also making it
02:27
more inclusive.
02:28
And we had Africa Union join G20, which was quite an anomaly not to have them.
02:34
Since then, we've seen Indonesia, India, Brazil, and then next South Africa will leave G20,
02:41
which is a great signal that countries are emerging, countries emerging democracies
02:47
But a lot is changing.
02:48
Concomitant to that G20 is the COP29 climate talks taking place in Azerbaijan.
02:55
It's tough going, I'm told, with 48 hours to go.
02:58
And the question is, the climate sort of overall goals that they agreed upon in the communique
03:04
in Rio, are those ready to be torn up after January the 20th?
03:11
Well I think we'll have to wait and see where we actually go on this because, you know,
03:14
we'll let the new administration come into office and then we'll see how they approach
03:19
this issue.
03:20
But then the United States is perhaps not the only arbiter of where we go on the climate
03:27
goals.
03:28
There are a larger set of issues we need to be honest about in addressing this, including
03:32
unfulfilled promises, shifting goalposts, the absence of real collective global effort
03:39
in recognition in accordance with the principles of common but differentiated responsibilities.
03:45
I think if the world is able to come together without the United States in addressing the
03:51
issue in a sincere, fair, equitable, just manner, we will be able to achieve our goals.
03:57
Right now here in France, there's anxiety ahead of the return of Donald Trump.
04:03
Are you sensing that anxiety?
04:05
Is that something you're putting in your diplomatic cables back to Delhi?
04:11
And is it justified, that anxiety?
04:13
Well I can't speak for whether it's justified or not as far as France or Europe is concerned.
04:20
I do of course have conversations here, some of which, obviously what I write back is not
04:26
something I'd discuss on France 24.
04:28
But look, I think...
04:31
When you write home and tell them what the French view is on all of this, what are you
04:35
telling them about this?
04:38
The feeling here about the future, when they look at the future of NATO, when they look
04:42
at things like what you were discussing earlier, perhaps the end of free trade as we've known
04:46
it up to now.
04:47
Well, I'd say this, that you know, President Donald Trump or President-elect Donald Trump
04:52
has made it quite clear that it's not going to be business as usual as far as the United
04:56
States is concerned and the U.S. engagement with the rest of the world is concerned, U.S.
05:00
engagement with global institutions, global compacts and international order as we understand
05:06
it.
05:07
That's certainly going to change.
05:08
It is already changing but that may perhaps be a disruptive moment, something that accelerates
05:13
that change.
05:14
So we'll have to wait and see how all of us, the rest of the world respond to it, how we
05:19
calibrate it, how they are going to deal with it.
05:22
So it's not a one-off situation or a linear way of looking at it.
05:27
As far as India is concerned, of course, we've had a very strong relationship with
05:32
the United States during President Trump's first presidency, as we've had with other
05:37
presidents from President Clinton, President Bush, President Obama, President Biden.
05:42
And what we've seen so far suggests that there will be continuity in that relationship.
05:47
There will, of course, be challenges in a complex, large relationship as we have with
05:51
the United States.
05:52
But I think we too...
05:53
Because you remember in 2019, you had in Dallas, I think it was, this Howdy Modi rally
06:00
where Narendra Modi and Donald Trump were there together.
06:03
Yes.
06:04
Will that be possible next time around if Donald Trump doubles down on tariffs for imports?
06:11
I think these are all going to be subject of bilateral negotiations.
06:15
I think first of all, we have to recognize what is the fundamental premise of the relationship.
06:20
It is a great deal of comfort, strategic convergence, an excellent relationship between
06:26
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President-elect Trump.
06:31
And so far, we also understand how we can deal with each other.
06:34
So there are larger, broader, global, geopolitical, economic issues to deal with.
06:39
Within that, as I said, there will be issues relating bilateral issues.
06:44
But it's also going to be important for all of us, not just for Europe or for anyone else,
06:48
but also for us to see how he deals with other countries, how the new U.S. administration
06:54
deals with global issues, global challenges, and global institutions.
06:59
And that would obviously include trade, climate change, finance.
07:02
It would also include how you deal with all these institutions that we are familiar with,
07:08
which have been at the center of global governance, global security, trade and finance, climate
07:13
change, et cetera.
07:14
So there's a need for those common rules.
07:16
And here's the question, then.
07:18
At the same time, there's a sort of, I don't know if it is a Trump effect, but certainly
07:23
concomitant to what's going on, the change in U.S. politics.
07:26
On your watch here in France, you've seen the rise of the French far right.
07:31
You've seen how politics, there's much more anti-immigration talk than before.
07:38
What's changed here in France in the four years that you've been here?
07:41
Well, that's a very interesting question.
07:43
Of course, I'm not going to get into classification of political parties into different vocabularies.
07:51
But I would say that, yes, I've seen some of the same anxieties being expressed over
07:56
here.
07:57
Look, we are at a moment in the evolution of our societies where, due to a vast area
08:06
of changes that you see, economic, political, social, technological, people are seeing
08:14
a great deal of uncertainty, dislocation about the future, and uncertainty, maybe perhaps
08:20
even pessimism.
08:22
And because of all these changes are affecting people in diverse ways, there's, of course,
08:28
accelerated by a war in Europe.
08:30
We have seen people search for answers.
08:33
There are questions, somehow the present system people feel, the political systems,
08:38
the political institutions, political parties are not able to address their concerns, not
08:44
able to answer their questions.
08:47
And therefore, they're looking for alternative politics, alternative ways of dealing with
08:54
their problems.
08:55
And it is something which is happening across the world.
08:59
And you have to recognize that there are some common links in this.
09:03
The common links is the rise of social media.
09:04
The common links is the great dislocations that the globalization has produced in some
09:11
quarters, benefits in the others.
09:14
People who have lost out don't understand what their future holds for them.
09:19
So we are witnessing, perhaps, when you're walking through a forest, you don't really
09:24
see the trees.
09:25
Well, let me ask you this final question, then.
09:27
You arrive in Paris.
09:29
It's COVID lockdown.
09:32
Is that a distant memory, or is that related to everything you've just said, and it's still
09:37
very much present in your mind as you get ready to leave?
09:39
You know, human beings have a way of putting painful experiences behind them.
09:44
And somehow in these four years, it is easy to forget about it when you go around on the
09:48
streets and when you see the magnificent Olympics that Paris hosted.
09:53
And I would say that at the two bookends of my stay over here.
09:57
But I think the consequences of COVID is still present on a daily basis in everyone's life.
10:04
The changes it brought about, the disruptions it created, the losses that it generated at
10:11
psychological, emotional, and even in material terms, continues to have an impact on lives
10:18
of the people, but also, I would say, therefore, on politics, on economic choices, on the way
10:24
people look, as the way they are organized socially and politically.
10:29
And this has been exacerbated, of course, here in Europe by the war.
10:32
But as I said, there are deeper underlying structural shifts that are taking place, geopolitical,
10:38
economic, technological, which is in a sense in dissonance with the way we are organized
10:45
today to our political thoughts, our economic philosophy, our economic organizations.
10:51
And it is all coming to a clash where people are looking, therefore, for different kinds
10:56
of answers.
10:57
And this is exactly why you see politics in Europe, in the United States, in many other
11:02
parts of the world are getting disrupted in different ways.
11:06
We are leaving behind what was familiar to us.
11:09
We don't know what we are heading into.
11:11
And therefore, the unfamiliar future, the uncertain transition is creating all kinds
11:16
of social anxieties.
11:17
Jawed Ashraf, we wish you best of luck.
11:20
Thank you very much.
11:21
Thanks so much for being with us here on France 24.
11:22
It was a pleasure.
11:23
And I'd say this, that it was a bit of really educational and enriching experience to have
11:27
lived in France and Europe at this very pivotal moment of time, besides what we've been able
11:33
to achieve in our bilateral relations between India and France.
11:36
Thank you very much.
11:37
Come back soon.
11:38
Many thanks.
11:39
Stay with us.
11:40
There's much more to come here on France 24.
11:41
More news plus a day's business and sports.
11:47
See you soon.
11:48
Bye.
11:49
Bye.
11:50
Bye.
11:51
Bye.
11:52
Bye.
11:53
Bye.
11:54
Bye.
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