Russia blames NATO for Ukraine abandoning nonaligned status

Posted: December 25, 2014 at 4:49 am

Top Russian security officials Wednesday accused NATO of pressuring Ukraine to drop its post-Soviet nonaligned status and warned that Moscow's relations with the Western alliance would be damaged beyond repair if it extends membership to the longtime Kremlin ally.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has made clear with his seizure of Ukraine's Crimea region and his support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine that he regards Kiev's political turn toward the European Union and NATO as a threat to Russia's regional security.

Lawmakers in Kiev on Tuesday voted to end Ukraine's nonaligned status, a posture the westernmost former Soviet republic adopted after the communist federation's breakup in 1991. At that time Ukraine was seeking to calm fears in Moscow that the geographically strategic republic where Russia's Black Sea fleet is based wouldn't drift into the West's sphere of influence.

Ukraine's Supreme Council voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to drop the nonaligned commitment as an initial step toward eventual membership in NATO. The 28-nation defense bloc already includes the three former Soviet Baltic republics of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, as well as all Eastern European states once tethered to Moscow under the Warsaw Pact military alliance.

NATO membership for Ukraine is years away at best, as the country must first conduct sweeping reforms of its armed forces to meet alliance "interoperability" requirements, as well as resolve the armed conflict that broke out in eastern Ukraine after Russia annexed Crimea in March. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has said his economically constrained country cannot reasonably expect to be in shape for NATO accession before 2020.

Still, Russian officials have reacted angrily to the renunciation of nonalignment and warned of dire consequences should Ukraine join NATO.

"Under the slogan of Russian threat, NATO is building its military potential in the Baltic states, Poland, Bulgaria and Romania," Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov told news agencies in Russia.

If Ukraine joins NATO, "we will have a complete collapse with NATO, which will be practically impossible to rebuild," Antonov said, according to the Sputnik news site.

"NATO countries prompted Ukraine to take a counterproductive decision while trying to turn Ukraine into a forward line of confrontation with Russia, Antonov was quoted as saying by the Tass news agency.

Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also lashed out at Ukraine and NATO over the nonaligned status change, calling it "counterproductive as it only enhances the confrontation by creating an illusion that the adoption of such laws can resolve the deep internal state crisis in Ukraine."

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Russia blames NATO for Ukraine abandoning nonaligned status

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