ROB
GILLIES
TORONTO (AP) -- Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday
that Russia should never be allowed back in the Group of 7 as long as Vladimir
Putin is president.
Harper said in an exclusive interview with The
Associated Press that he expects the group won't ever let Putin back in. He
made the remarks ahead of his trip to Ukraine and the Group of 7 meeting in
Germany this week.
Harper said even long before the Ukraine crisis, Russia has eroded any
basis for belonging to the group of wealthy nations. He also noted that Russia
has ramped up long range bomber patrols near North American airspace. The G-7
suspended Russia last year but hasn't ruled out welcoming him back.
"I don't think Russia under Vladimir Putin belongs in the G7.
Period," Harper said. "Canada would very, very strongly oppose Putin
ever sitting around that table again. It would require consensus to bring
Russia back and that consensus will just not happen."
The prime minister said Russia is far from like-minded.
"Russia is more often than not trying deliberately to be a
strategic rival, to deliberately counter the good things we're trying to
achieve in the world than for no other reason than to just counter them,"
Harper said.
Harper said the "mindset of the guy we are dealing with is that the
Cold War has never ended and `I've got to fight to change the ending
somehow."
"I don't think there is any way under this leader Russia will ever
change," Harper said.
Putin received a less-than-warm welcome from Harper
last November when he approached Harper for a handshake at the G-20 summit in
Australia. Harper told Putin: "I guess I'll shake your hand, but I have
only one thing to say to you: You need to get out of Ukraine."
Asked what Putin's response was, Harper said Putin denied that he was in
Ukraine.
"This is kind of typical Russian foreign policy
to just say black is white even though everyone knows the contrary. I think as
long as that's the view that they are going to take, that they're just going to
treat us like we are all stupid, there really is no point in having a dialogue
with them," Harper said.
The conflict between Russia and Ukraine escalated last year when the
Kremlin-backed president in Kiev fled amid protests. Pro-Russian separatists
moved to take over the strategically important Crimean Peninsula, which Russia
later annexed. The West doesn't recognize that move
Harper noted Russia has ramped up its long-range
bomber patrols near North American airspace since the Ukraine conflict started.
"This is a country that has shown a willingness to invade its
neighbors, to actually seize territory that does not belong to it, and so I
don't think we should take this escalation of a hostile military posture lightly.
It needs to be treated seriously," Harper said.
A senior Canadian official said Russia has more than doubled its use of
long range bomber patrols, including near North American airspace and other
Western nations. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
official was not authorized to speak publicly, said there were 52 Russian
patrols last year compared to 23 in each of the previous two years.
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