Official publication of the Kremlin's press service: (red color added to the funniest parts by me, the Saker)
Meeting with Security Council members
April 11, 2014, 17:00
Novo-Ogaryovo, Moscow Region
Vladimir Putin held a briefing session with permanent members of the Security Council.
Taking part in the meeting were Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matviyenko, State Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin, Chief of Staff of the Presidential Executive Office Sergei Ivanov, Secretary of the Security Council Nikolai Patrushev, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, Director of the Federal Security Service Alexander Bortnikov, Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service Mikhail Fradkov, and permanent member of the Security Council Boris Gryzlov.
* * *
PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VLADIMIR PUTIN: Good afternoon, colleagues,
We
will discuss routine matters today. I wanted to start though with a
question for the Foreign Minister. What is happening with my request to
get to our European partners and gas customers the information that I
set out in a letter following the meeting with Government members on the
situation with our cooperation with Ukraine?
FOREIGN MINISTER SERGEI LAVROV:
We have carried out your instruction to send the letter to the leaders
of European countries that receive Russian gas via Ukrainian territory.
Our ambassadors in the countries concerned delivered the letters to
their intended recipients yesterday. Everyone has given the letter their
serious attention and promised to promptly give it their consideration
and draft their response. We hope the response will be constructive. We
have received only a preliminary reaction from Europe so far, but we
have already heard from Washington, where an official State Department
spokesperson said that Russia should not politicise gas affairs with
Ukraine, should let the market decide prices, and called the arguments
that we set out for our European partners “gas blackmail.”
VLADIMIR PUTIN:
This is somewhat curious. I say this first of all because it is not the
proper thing to read others’ letters. I did not write to Washington
after all, but to our gas customers in Europe. We are already used to
the fact that our American friends eavesdrop on everyone, but it is
really not the done thing to sneak a look at others’ correspondence.
Seriously though, I’m obviously going to have to remind everyone that
the formula we use to calculate the gas price was agreed in the
official contract the Russia’s Gazprom signed with Ukraine’s Naftogaz in
2009. The people currently responsible for the energy sector in today’s
government in Kiev held the same office back then too and took part in
signing that contract. No changes have been made to the formula since
that moment.
Yes,
it is true that we offered various discounts for various reasons at
different times. In December 2013, as you know, we offered Ukraine a
loan of $3 billion and discounted the gas price under condition that
debts for 2013 be settled and that current payments be made on time.
Neither of those conditions was met. What’s more, the lowest prices were
in effect over the first quarter of this year, but even at this very
lowest price our Ukrainian partners stopped making their payments.
The
latest deadline in the gas contract’s schedule – payment for March 2014
– fell on April 7. Of a total expected payment of more than $500
million - $540 million, I think the figure comes to – we received not a
single dollar or ruble. We received nothing at all. There is simply no
way that we can tolerate this situation. Faced with these circumstances,
Gazprom rescinded the discounts, in accordance with the earlier
agreement.
If
we want to be clear about the root of these recent problems, the fact
of the matter is that Russia cannot continue to bear such a burden all
on its own. It was for this reason that we appealed to our partners and
friends in Europe in the hope that we can organise a meeting as soon as
possible to work out ways of helping and supporting Ukraine's economy.
Whoever really does care about Ukraine and the Ukrainian people should
make their contribution to preventing the country’s economy from going
bankrupt.
This
will take more than handing out pies at the Maidan. That’s all not
enough to keep the Ukrainian economy from slipping into total chaos. Our
American partners have responded so negatively to our proposal, which
is very strange to see. We know that they have declared their
willingness to make a $1-billion loan available, not in the form of
credits and assistance, but in the form of guarantees. What does this
mean? It means guarantees for banks that would be ready to lend to
Ukraine, but there are no such banks and thus this amounts to no
assistance at all. This really is a very strange situation and we have
every reason to be concerned about it.
Let
me say once again too that we have no plans or intention to cut off gas
supplies to Ukraine. But in accordance with the contract that was
signed and has been in effect since 2009, and which no one has
cancelled, Gazprom has the right to ask for advance payment, and this is
what the Russian Government is proposing. What this means is that next
month, Ukraine will receive only as much gas as it pays for this month.
The
contract gives us this right. I ask the Russian Government and Gazprom
to show our European partners the relevant terms in the contract.
Incidentally, in my letter I made reference to these same terms. You
could take the relevant sections from the contract and send them to the
European capitals as an appendix to my letter, all the more so as the
contract long ago got ‘leaked’ anyway onto the Internet during all the
political battles in Ukraine.
I
ask the Foreign Ministry to deliver this additional information to our
partners and remind them that Gazprom is not just a Russian commercial
company but is a joint-stock company with almost 50 percent of shares in
it being held by private companies, including foreign ones. Even as big
a company as Gazprom cannot bear the entire burden of subsidising
Ukraine’s economy. This is simply not possible and everyone needs to
understand this.
Russia
is being very careful in its action and is taking a very balanced and
respectful line towards all of our partners. We most certainly guarantee
that we will fulfill in full our obligations to our European gas
customers. It is not Russia that is the issue. The problem is one of
ensuring gas transit via Ukraine. I ask the Foreign Ministry to carry
out this instruction as rapidly as possible.