UK minister refuses to rule out Russian return to G7

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Moscow could rejoin the Western-dominated group as part of a Ukraine conflict settlement, Dan Jarvis has suggested The West could consider Russia’s return to the G7 as part of post-conflict negotiations over Ukraine, UK Security Minister Dan Jarvis has suggested. However, Downing Street swiftly rejected the idea, insisting Moscow could not rejoin unless it made major territorial concessions to Kiev.In an interview with Times Radio on Monday, Jarvis said Russia’s potential reinstatement in the Western-dominated group would be “a matter to be discussed with international allies” once the hostilities between Moscow and Kiev have ceased.He added that UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer would be engaging in discussions with world leaders later this week, describing the UK’s approach as a “stick-and-carrot” strategy to push Russia toward ending the conflict.Jarvis’ comments sparked immediate pushback from Downing Street, which reaffirmed that the UK would not accept Russia’s return while it controls territory claimed by Ukraine. Read more G8 has lost its relevance – Kremlin “We can’t countenance Russia joining the G7 whilst it has got illegal forces in Ukraine,” a spokesman for Prime Minister Keir Starmer said, adding that Britain’s position on the issue “hasn’t changed.”Asked specifically if Russia could re-enter while holding onto Crimea, the peninsula which overwhelmingly voted to secede from Ukraine and join Russia after a Western-backed coup in Kiev in 2014, the spokesman would not give a direct answer. “I am not going to get ahead of the talks that are ongoing. Our focus is on putting Ukraine in the strongest possible position, exercising maximum pressure on Russia.”When pressed on why Jarvis made his remarks about Russia returning to G7, the spokesman suggested that he “was talking more broadly about the fact that talks are happening on a wide range of measures relating to Russia and Ukraine.”Moscow was expelled from what was then the G8 in 2014 after Crimea rejoined Russia. However, earlier this month, US President Donald Trump said that he “would love to have them [Russia] back,” suggesting that “it was a mistake to throw them out,” and that the issue of Russia’s membership should not hinge on whether the West is in agreement with Moscow or not. Despite these discussions, Russia has shown little interest in rejoining. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has dismissed the idea, explaining that the G7 has “lost its relevance” as global economic power has shifted elsewhere.Instead, Moscow has for years focused on promoting cooperation within the BRICS economic forum, which is made up mostly of emerging economies. The bloc, which has recently undergone unprecedented expansion, now accounts for roughly 46% of the world’s population and over 36% of global GDP, according to estimates.