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13-15 MAY 2022

Tempus Fugit – Time Flees

3 days packed with insights by distinguished policymakers, analysts, politicians, military personnel and academia from around the globe in Tallinn, Estonia. Key foreign and security policy issues discussed mostly from the perspective of the northern and eastern parts of Europe.

Conference Summary

How Much Pain Is the West Ready to Endure?

The LMC 2022 (15th Lennart Meri Conference, 13-15 May 2022, Tallinn) was the first major international foreign and security policy conference to take place after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The war inevitably set the tone of the conference, its origins and consequences forming a thread that ran through every panel from start to finish.

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Conference Agenda

Agenda

You can watch again public panel discussions that were not restricted by the Chatham House Rule. Links to the recordings, photo galleries and introductions are available under each discussion.

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Some key messages

Q&A

Q&A

Brief answers to a big question: what will be the aftermath of Russia’s war in Ukraine for the international order? Orysia Lutsevych, Charles Grant, Hanna Shelest, Jill Dougherty, Salome Samadashvili, Sergei Medvedev, Marshall Billingslea, Claudia Major, Mehdi Beyad, Damon Wilson, Anna Wieslander.

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Articles

Analyses, commentaries and interviews that decode foreign, security and defence policy and are published in the Lennart Meri Conference special edition of ICDS Diplomaatia magazine.

Lennart Meri Lecture 2022 by Ambassador Daniel Fried

Time Flies, as this conference observes. Tempus fugit – time marches on, as the saying goes. So what? Does the march of time have meaning? Does the passage of time tend to bring progress? Are human beings, over time, on an ascendent track, morally and…

LMC 2022

Tempus Fugit – Time Flees

September 2021, the date of the last Lennart Meri Conference, seems eons ago. Russia’s savage war in Ukraine is already in its third month, its fallout landing from Central Asia to North Africa, from the Indo Pacific and the Middle East to Finland and Sweden.

LMC 2022

Evil is Real: Time to Stand Up

What words are there when a country launches an all-out attack on its neighbour? “Evil is real,” I posted on Twitter on the morning of 24 February. We must recognise the evil of Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine and be more courageous in our response.

LMC 2022

When Reality Bites

Russia’s war in Ukraine is not over, but it is not too soon to start thinking about what comes next – for Ukraine’s future, and our own.

LMC 2022

These Challenging Times Demand an Unbending Response

There can be no illusions about the rest of the world’s relationship with a Russia ruled by Vladimir Putin.

Ukraine’s Resilience: Theory Meets Practice

Although for some years, the Sumy State University had developed a theoretical grasp of the subject, it was not until 24 February 2022 – when Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine – that I had my first real-life encounter with resilience.

LMC 2022

Speakers

Alar Karis

President of Estonia

Andrzej Duda

President of Poland

Kaja Kallas

Prime Minister of Estonia

Roberta Metsola

President of the European Parliament

Kadri Simson

European Commissioner for Energy

Michael Carpenter

Ambassador, U.S. Mission to the OSCE

Avril Haines

Director, National Intelligence of the United States

Ivan Krastev

Chairman, Centre for Liberal Strategies
Partners and supporters 2022

About Lennart Meri Conference

“We can never have too much security,” said President Lennart Meri. To mark his continuing legacy in foreign and security policy thinking, the annual Lennart Meri Conference aims to encourage curiosity and debate, highlight unity and diversity, and foster liberty and democracy.