The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in Russia.
Photo: Reuters
The annual economic forum in St. Petersburg used to yield multibillion-dollar deals and feature performances by global music stars. With the war in Ukraine still raging, the mood has shifted. The event, which opened on Wednesday and will run through Saturday, now reflects a Russia fundamentally transformed, ‘The New York Times’ writes.
During his early years in the Kremlin, President Vladimir V. Putin used the annual economic conference in St. Petersburg as a marquee event to showcase how Russia was becoming a magnet for Western businesses.
Multibillion-dollar oil and gas deals were signed, including the agreement to build the Nord Stream 2 pipeline between Russia and Germany. Western corporate giants such as BP, Chevron, Deutsche Bank and Total sent their chief executives. In 2018, President Emmanuel Macron of France was the guest of honor. In 2011, Sting performed in front of the Winter Palace.
But the event, which opened on Wednesday and will run through Saturday, now reflects a Russia fundamentally transformed by Mr. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The Kingdom of Bahrain was the guest of honor, and the Chinese brand Tank, not Mercedes, was selected as the official car. A delegation of the Taliban roamed the giant exhibition center, instead of executives from Morgan Stanley and Citibank. Only second-tier Russian pop and rock stars were on show, with no international acts appearing at all. And there was no Coca-Cola; it had been replaced by a Russian-made analog.
Despite newly opened lines of communication between Mr. Putin and President Trump, major American investors once again shunned the event. The Russia-United States session, billed as dedicated to “identifying shared interests and shaping long-term partnerships,” was closed to the media and featured a little-known crypto investor and a former executive of a Russian state-owned petrochemicals company.
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Kirill Dmitriev, who has been acting as the Kremlin’s point man in negotiations with the White House, said in an interview that Russia “cannot be dependent on the West” but that “there should be some balance.”
Mr. Dmitriev noted that more than 70 American representatives were present but that many did not make their participation public because “Biden made Russia look scary,” referring to former President Joseph R. Biden Jr.
Mr. Dmitriev added that he expected “real results” of the renewed Russian-U.S. dialogue would appear “by the end of the year,” on the assumption that some progress over the Russia-Ukraine conflict needed to be achieved first. It is likely that American energy companies would be first to come back to the Russian market, Mr. Dmitriev said.
But some Russian business leaders on Wednesday said they would not be thrilled to see the return of their American counterparts.
Oleg Paroyev, director general of Vkusno i Tochka, a fast-food chain that replaced McDonald’s after it exited Russia in 2022, made it clear that he did not want the golden arches to come back.
“Some people believe that sanctions would get lifted one day, and things will go back to what they were like before,” he said at a panel on Wednesday. “We don’t believe that things will go back, they will be different.”
Instead of waiting for Western companies to return, Russian businesses “must build something in Russia,” he said.
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