Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says Russia has been exploring for some time using national currencies to settle bilateral trade deals with Turkey and other countries.
Russian foreign minister says dollar's days numbered as global currency
15 Aug 2018 - 12:31
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says Russia has been exploring for some time using national currencies to settle bilateral trade deals with Turkey and other countries.
Lavrov, who was speaking at a news conference with his Turkish counterpart in Ankara, said on Tuesday that the US dollar’s role as a global trade currency was in decline. “I’m confident that the grave abuse of the role of the US dollar as a global reserve currency will result over time in the weakening and demise of its role.”
The top Russian diplomat went on to say that Moscow favored bilateral trade with all countries in their national currencies, rather than the dollar.
“The use of national currencies for mutual trade has for several years been one of the tasks that the presidents of Russia and Turkey had set,” said Lavrov.
“Identical processes have been happening in our relations with Iran. Not only with Turkey and Iran, we’re also arranging and already implementing payments in national currencies with the People’s Republic of China,” he added
The remarks come as the Kremlin has already backed a Turkish plan to dump the dollar and trade in national currencies.
On Saturday, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan announced that Turkey was preparing to conduct trade through national currencies with China, Russia and Ukraine.
Asked about Erdogan's proposal, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that Russia had been pushing for such an arrangement with all countries. He said the issue had been raised on more than one occasion during bilateral talks.
Erdogan, who has described the Turkish lira's fall as the consequence of a plot, also said that recent US actions were a stab in the back against Ankara.
US President Donald Trump has gone on a sanctioning frenzy in recent months, targeting Iran, Turkey, and Russia, and creating what experts have dubbed an “axis of the sanctioned.”
Trump has recently ordered to double tariffs on Turkish aluminum and steel imports to 20 and 50 percent, respectively, saying, "Our relations with Turkey are not good at this time!”
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