STATEMENT
of the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
"On Ensuring International Security
in the Emerging Multipolar World"
Parliamentary delegations of the Member States of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, in the year of the 80th anniversary of the victory in World War II and the foundation of the United Nations,
paying tribute to the heroic feat of the peoples who defended the world from Nazism,
recognizing the depth of the global changes taking place in the world, affecting all spheres of political, socio-economic
and other public relations,
commending the aspiration of an increasing number of states and associations to create a more equitable multipolar world order based on the sovereign equality of states and compliance with the norms and principles of international law, which offers new prospects for the sustainable development of states and mutually beneficial international cooperation,
noting the escalating geopolitical confrontation, growing challenges and threats to international and regional security and stability, including in the area of responsibility of the Collective Security Treaty Organization,
underlining the need to take collective measures
to strengthen global and regional security, respect the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, universally recognized norms of international law and the priority of the political and diplomatic settlement of conflicts,
expressing deep concern over the deterioration of the security situation in various regions of the world, the danger of the spread of international terrorism and extremism and increasing radicalization of society, the rise of organized transnational crime and illicit drug trafficking,
state the following:
1. In the emerging multipolar world and with the increase in challenges and threats to global and regional security, it is particularly important to develop common approaches to building an architecture of equal and indivisible Eurasian security that is open to all interested states and intergovernmental associations operating in Eurasia, and not aimed against any countries or associations, in accordance with the purposes and principles of the UN Charter.
2. We remember the hardships of previous world wars, which brought irreparable losses, suffering and destruction to humanity, and recognize the danger of further escalation of international tensions, coercion and other forms of interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states, which could provoke global confrontation.
3. We express our unwavering and firm commitment to promoting the policy of good-neighborliness and peaceful coexistence among states, with due regard for national interests, and to jointly seeking solutions to overcome interstate conflicts and disputes through political and diplomatic means.
4. We welcome the initiatives to strengthen international peace and security set out in the Tianjin Declaration of the Council of the Heads of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Member States, adopted on September 1, 2025, and the pooling of efforts to achieve long-term and equitable peace on the Eurasian continent in the spirit of the inseparable interconnection between its security, economic and social and humanitarian development.
5. We advocate for furthering cooperation in peacekeeping, strengthening the international security and stability system and, in particular, countering international terrorism, extremism and organized transnational crime, including drug trafficking, illicit trafficking in weapons and cybercrime.