
Moscow has no intention of attacking the US-led military bloc and is prepared to give official guarantees to that effect, the top diplomat has said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the Minsk International Conference on Eurasian Security, Minsk, Belarus, October 28, 2025. © Sputnik/Kirill Zykov Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has outlined Moscow’s vision of relations with an increasingly belligerent NATO, US President Donald Trump’s administration, and the security architecture in Eurasia. Lavrov touched on these and other topics at an international security conference in Minsk, Belarus on Tuesday. Here are the key takeaways from his address: Russia-NATO relations According to the foreign minister, EU leaders are studiously avoiding these discussions, aiming instead for “security guarantees against Russia, as opposed to with Russia.” Lavrov claimed that the West is openly preparing for a “new big European war” against Russia and key ally Belarus. He said there is ongoing militarization across most European NATO member states. “NATO’s expansion has not stopped for a single minute, despite assurances not to move eastward by an inch given to Soviet leaders,” he said, accusing the West of seeking to preserve its “global dominance” despite the dawn of a new era. The Western military bloc is attempting to establish a foothold as far afield as the Asia-Pacific, with a view to containing China, North Korea, and Russia, Lavrov stated.
Moscow “has repeatedly said that we have had no intention of attacking any of the current NATO and European Union member states,” Lavrov stressed. He added that Russia is prepared to give official guarantees to this effect as part of a future security architecture in Eurasia.
Russia-US dialogue
Russia needs “guarantees” that a potential summit between President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart, Donald Trump, “will yield a concrete result,” the foreign minister explained.
Tentative discussions on a meeting in Budapest, Hungary began after the two presidents spoke by phone earlier this month. Last week, Trump clarified there are no plans for talks in the near future, as he wants to make sure it would not be “wasted time” in terms of resolving the Ukraine conflict. On Sunday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov similarly said that both Moscow and Washington have to do a substantial amount of “preparatory work before top-level negotiations can take place.”
Moscow hopes that the US president “really wants a stable peace,” Lavrov said. He expressed incredulity at the apparent change in Trump’s rhetoric in recent days, as the US president called for an immediate ceasefire along the current front lines. Moscow has rejected this scenario, insisting that the root causes of the Ukraine conflict should be addressed first.
Arms control
Moscow is awaiting Washington’s official response to Putin’s proposal to extend the central limitations of the New START Treaty – the only remaining arms control agreement between Russia and the US – for one year after it expires on February 5, 2026, Lavrov said.
In force since 2011, the accord limits both signatories to no more than 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads.
Earlier this month, Trump described the proposed extension as a “good idea.”
However, there is no chance of renewing the accord beyond the suggested one-year extension, the Russian foreign minister clarified. Moscow’s proposal is a goodwill gesture meant to give both Russia and the US enough time to work out a new agreement, he said.
For this to happen, “a fundamentally different atmosphere is needed in Russia-US relations,” Lavrov argued, adding that some headway in restoring dialogue had been made in recent months, though there is still a lot of work ahead.
Eurasia’s role
“Eurasia today is the geopolitical center of the newly emerging multi-polar world,” Lavrov stated in Minsk.
In order to minimize the risk of conflicts in Eurasia, a new security architecture is required, providing all nations with security guarantees, he suggested.
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NATO and the EU are actively attempting to undermine the establishment of this structure, hell-bent on turning Eurasia into its “fiefdom,” the foreign minister said.