World faces most fragile security moment since World War Two, Russian spy chief says
Reuters October 21, 2025 10:20 AM
Synopsis

Global security faces its most precarious moment since World War Two. Russia's intelligence chief Sergei Naryshkin warns of a fierce power struggle shaping the future world order. He stresses the urgent need for compromise to prevent a major war. Naryshkin also reiterated that Ukraine's leadership is impeding peace talks. Russia initiated the conflict in Ukraine in February 2022.

Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Director Sergey Naryshkin attends the opening ceremony of a monument to civilians killed during World War Two, marking the 80th anniversary of lifting of the Leningrad siege, near the village of Zaitsevo in the Leningrad Region, Russia January 27, 2024.
The fragility of world security is unmatched since World War Two, requiring willingness to compromise to avoid a new global conflict, Russia's RIA agency cited Sergei Naryshkin, head of Russia's SVR intelligence service, as saying on Tuesday.

"The world is now experiencing the most fragile moment for international security since World War Two, namely a period of qualitative transformation of the global order," RIA cited Naryshkin as saying.

Naryshkin said there is a "fierce struggle" between the largest global and regional centres of power to define the rules of the future world order.


"Our shared, and perhaps principal, task is to ensure that adaptation to the new reality proceeds without a major war, as has happened at previous historical stages," Naryshkin was quoted as saying.

He also repeated the Kremlin's standard line that the administration of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is hindering the peace process in Ukraine.

Russia launched the war in Ukraine with a full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022.
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