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| Photo: Rijksoverheid.nl |
Foreign affairs minister Halbe Zijlstra has admitted lying about being at a
meeting where Vladimir Putin supposedly set out his plans for a ‘Greater
Russia’.
Zijlstra claimed that he had overheard the Russian president talking
about his expansionist ambitions during a gathering of businesspeople at
Putin’s dacha in 2006. At the time Zijlstra was working for Shell. But in an
interview in the Volkskrant at the weekend he admitted that he had not been at
the meeting, but ‘borrowed’ the anecdote from someone whose identity he wanted
to protect.
Prime minister Mark Rutte said Zijlstra’s decision was ‘not
sensible’, but he would not be seeking Zijlstra’s resignation. Zijlstra and
Rutte are colleagues in the right-wing Liberal (VVD) party.
‘I made the
decision that this is an important geopolitical story with serious
implications,’ Zijlstra said. ‘I attributed the story to myself to make sure that
the revelations weren’t about the person who was actually there. Because that
could have had implications for him or his company.’
Rutte said it was ‘not a
case of fake news, because he wanted to protect a source. I think he is
credible because there is no dispute about the content of the story.’
In his
original version of the story, Zijlstra claimed he had been a back room in the
dacha when he heard Putin define ‘Greater Russia’ as ‘Russia, Belarus, Ukraine
and the Baltic states,’ adding that ‘Kazakhstan was nice to have’.
Doubts about
the veracity of the foreign minister’s claims came to light when former senior
Shell executive Jeroen van der Veer told the Volkskrant that Zijlstra had not
been at the meeting in 2006. Zijlstra admitted he was not present but insisted
that the substance of the story was true.
‘Was it sensible to protect my source
in the manner that I did? No, it wasn’t. But the information is correct,’ he
said. He did not confirm whether Van der Veer was the source.
The revelation
comes at an awkward moment for Zijlstra, who is due to fly out to Moscow on
Tuesday for his first official meeting with his Russian opposite number Sergey
Lavrov. Geert Wilders’s PVV party has called for a debate so the minister can
explain his actions to parliament before he leaves.
The VVD’s spin doctors used
the anecdote in October to counter claims that Zijlstra lacked experience of
international affairs when he took office.

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