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Ex-German FM, Politicians, Scientists Join Appeal for Easing Tension With Russia

© Sputnik / Michael Klimentyev / Go to the mediabankJuly 7, 2017. Russian President Vladimir Putin during a group photo session of the G20 heads of state, invited countries and international organizations in Hamburg. At left in the foreground: Chinese President Xi Jinping; right: President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan
July 7, 2017. Russian President Vladimir Putin during a group photo session of the G20 heads of state, invited countries and international organizations in Hamburg. At left in the foreground: Chinese President Xi Jinping; right: President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan - Sputnik International
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Prominent figures from all over the world are calling for a joint search for a solution to the existing crisis and current global problems. They are warning about the destructive consequences of a new arms race. The signees have urged “those in power” to create a new way to maintain “security and peace from Vancouver to Vladivostok” instead.

On April 14, 2018 multiple figures from different countries spoke in favor of returning common sense to international relations and have suggested a joint search for a political solution to the existing crisis. They have urged, to find and utilize "new roads to an order of peace and security from Vancouver to Vladivostok," in accordance with the Charter of Paris for a New Europe. The original signees to the appeal are German conductor Justus Frantz, former chief of staff of the German armed forces Harald Kujat, physicist Bruno Redeker, the CEO of the Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker foundation.

READ MORE: The 'Russian Threat' and the Politics of Mass Distraction

Many prominent figures from countries all over the world have also signed the appeal, such as former German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, German historian Jörg Baberowski, Russian political scientist Vladislav Belov, Russian economist Ruslan Grinberg, French philosopher Rémi Brague, Polish philosopher Andrzej Bronk, Austrian physicist Christian Fabjan, former SPD chairman and head of the Brandenburg cabinet Matthias Platzeck, Islamic scholar Ralph Ghadban, publicist and author from Paris Alfred Grosser, political scientist Alexander Rahr, former German Interior Minister Otto Schily as well as many others.

"The time is running out!  Sign  to  join  our  appeal  to  the  great  of  this  world  in  order  to  break  the antagonism  of  provocation  and  counter-provocation, suspicions  and  accusations,  threats  and  counter-threats, sanctions and counter-sanctions, erroneous judgments and exaggerated reactions and to return to jointly applied reason," says the appeal, published on the website of the Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker foundation, which has been translated from German into English and Russian.

READ MORE: From Khrushchev's Shoe to Powell's Tube: Global Politics' Most Iconic Symbols

The appeal focuses on multiple present problems, such as climate change, wars and the refugee crisis. The signatories warn of the existing danger that Russia and the United States "no longer see themselves as the stabilizing and leading powers." They also note that now these nations mainly consider themselves "the representatives of national interests" and that China, India, Turkey and Iran are increasingly showing the same trend.

The signees believe, that the mutual predictability of the Cold War and mutual trust after its end has been "mostly lost." They claim it instead has given way to political tensions, military confrontation and the return of an arms race with the addition of China to it. The appeal also warns that the use of the newest technologies in both conventional and nuclear armaments poses a threat to all people, as a simple human error and technical fault could push humanity "dangerously close to the point of no return."

READ MORE: Trump, Kim's Nuclear Buttons Quarrel Turns Politics Into Parody — Lawmaker

In the end, the appeal urges to prevent the further proliferation of nuclear weapons, to use political foresight and confidence-building military actions in the Middle East and Ukraine, to bring peace to hotspots in the world, such as Afghanistan and to ensure a reliable and real future for mankind.

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