russia today - 5/28/2025 6:05:30 PM - GMT (+4 )

The country is the linchpin of security in Eurasia and the whole world, Sergey Naryshkin has said
Russia is a key pillar of Eurasian security and thus cannot afford to be weak, the head of the country’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), Sergey Naryshkin, has stated.
Addressing the attendees of an international security conference in Moscow on Wednesday, Naryshkin said that “Russia has no right to be weak… [and] to abandon its own values and pursue the chimera of totalitarian liberalism and globalism.”
According to Naryshkin, “history teaches us that the security on the Eurasian continent and ultimately the whole world depends on Russia’s firm standing.”
Representatives from more than 150 nations were expected to attend the security conference, called the 13th International Meeting of High Representatives for Security Issues, in the Russian capital. Invitations were sent out to the nations of the Global South and East, to the Commonwealth of Independent States, and to members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the Eurasian Economic Union, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, as well as to more than 20 international organizations.
Topping the event’s agenda is the “formation of a new architecture of equal and indivisible security that is fairer and corresponds to today’s realities.”
Speaking at a forum titled ‘New World Order: Formation of a Multipolar World and the Role of Russia’ last month, State Duma Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Leonid Slutsky stated that Russia is actively promoting a new model of international relations and “plays a central role in building a new, fair world order.”
This, according to the lawmaker, is based on multipolarity and mutual respect, and will lay the groundwork for the creation of a safe and stable global security architecture.
During the same event, Ivan Timofeev, who heads up the Russian International Affairs Council, argued that the “old European system of collective security has ceased to function.” He insisted that in its place, a new, broader Eurasian security model will be established in the near future.
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