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A glimpse into Giorgia Meloni’s foreign policy

Giorgia Meloni
The leader of Brothers of Italy has strived to turn her party into a mainstream conservative entity, Europeanist and Atlanticist, and staunchly pro-Ukraine. Read our interview to Giulio Terzi, who oversees foreign policy and might end up at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The results are in, and Giorgia Meloni is poised to become the next Italian prime minister. Forming the next government will likely take weeks, but we can already make out its general outline. Especially since we interviewed former Ambassador Giulio Terzi, who oversees Brothers of Italy’s foreign policy and will likely carry over that expertise to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Here are some takeaways from the interview on today’s driving issues.

On the Russian war in Ukraine. “Italian diplomacy must act with the European and Atlantic partners to keep them on the right side of history. Faced with an aggressor that doesn’t want to negotiate until he has achieved all of his neo-imperialist objectives, the only way to reach the negotiation stage is to stand in the way of achieving them.”

On Vladimir Putin and negotiation. “To my knowledge, Putin has no intention of negotiating with us,” since “he hasn’t achieved his goals yet. He traditionally negotiates only when he has already taken everything he wanted.” Perhaps, as he endangered the European space of freedom and security, “he is now realising that […] he’s bitten off more than he can chew.

On energy and the European price cap. “European cohesion is growing […] the hesitations of France and Germany have been overcome, and the countries are marching together along a line which the Italian government had even anticipated with the far-sighted request of implementing the price cap last March.”

On China and the Silk Road. Mr Terzi called for a “thorough review” of the Memorandum of Understanding on the Belt and Road Initiative, signed in 2019 by Giuseppe Conte’s first government, and “close consultation with European and Atlantic partners, in order to rebalance the weights with Beijing.”

On Atlanticism, Europeanism and defence. “If we look at security, Atlanticism and Europeanism are two closely related dimensions in the vision of a party like Brothers of Italy.” He pointed at examples such as “the defence industry and the hundreds of different products that should [be replaced by] few integrated types of weapons.”

 

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