His intended message, presumably, was that today’s Russia is as great and powerful as the USSR once was; that Vladimir Putin has restored his country’s status as a superpower deserving of global respect. Nostalgia for the Cold War era — when the Soviet Union and the United States were the world’s only two superpowers — has consumed the Kremlin ever since the Soviet empire crumbled.
Lavrov himself is very much a creature of the past. Though he is fluent in the language of multilateral diplomacy (owing to a previous posting at the United Nations in New York), his penchant for bullying has distinct Soviet roots. He seems sincere in his belief that things were better when the USSR existed. His frequent trips to Pyongyang, North Korea, in recent years cannot have been enjoyable. When a summit with the US president on what was once Russian territory presented itself, he made sure to pack his old sweater.