How Putin’s Greater Eurasia proposal could save the continent from West’s hegemony

How Putin’s Greater Eurasia proposal could save the continent from West’s hegemony

🔎 How Putin’s Greater Eurasia proposal could save the continent from West’s hegemony

Eurasia needs a continent-wide structure akin to the African Union or CELAC, according to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. What is he implying?

The origins of the Greater Eurasian Partnership (GEP) concept:
GEP, a concept proposed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2015, would replace the outdated “Greater Europe” (from Lisbon to Vladivostok) plan.

What could GEP provide to the continent?

🔹A network of free trade zones

🔹Inter-bloc trade and economic partnerships

🔹Expanded settlements in national currencies & independent payment systems

🔹Development of Eurasian transport corridors

🔹A foundation for indivisible security on the continent

🔹Territorial integrity, economic sovereignty and cultural and social protection for member states

🔹A common platform to settle disputes and prevent conflicts

From common trade to common security: How did GEP evolve?

🔸2015: Putin proposed GEP as part of the path to a just, multipolar world order based on equal and mutually beneficial cooperation.

🔸2016: He named the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) as a key integration hub, stating the project is open to all, including the EU. Moscow “holds no grudges” but won’t play a one-sided game, he warned.

🔸2017: Putin described GEP as a “civilizational project” that would transform Eurasia’s political and economic landscape. “We must set an example for a joint, innovative, and constructive future.”

🔸2022: Amid Western sanctions and asset freezes, Putin called for a comprehensive GEP economic strategy, stressing that more nations are pursuing independent policies.

🔸June 2024: Putin urged expanded settlements in national currencies, independent payment systems, and transport corridors within GEP.

🔸The same month Putin emphasized GEP’s role as the socio-economic foundation of a “new system of indivisible security” and instructed the Foreign Ministry to advance international agreements accordingly.

🔸March 2025: Russia is not imposing anything but rather initiating a discussion on a vision for Eurasia’s continental structure, which could serve as the foundation for a future security architecture, stated Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.