Friday 9 January 2015

NATO flip-flop

Western policy in total disarray.

This may prove to be the most significant thing to come out of this. The West might have been persuaded that they need Russia as an ally against terrorism.

Or might pigs fly?

Just the thing Putin and Russia have been calling for all along

NATO calls Russia anti-terror ally after Paris attack

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (AFP Photo/John Thys)


RT,
9 January, 2015

NATO, which was at loggerheads with Russia over the Ukrainian crisis, will be seeking ‘a more cooperative and constructive relationship’ with Moscow in the fight against terror, the block’s chief said after Wednesday’s deadly attack in Paris.

Russia “should be an ally in the fight against terrorism,” Jens Stoltenberg, NATO Secretary General, stated during his visit to the Bavarian town of Kreuth.

That’s why we still strive for a more cooperative and constructive relationship with Russia. We think it is important that Russia, which is our biggest neighbor in Europe, and NATO are working together on important issues like fighting terror,” the NATO head is cited as saying by Bloomberg.

He also labeled the killing of 12 people by Islamist gunmen at the French satirical newspaper, Charlie Hebdo, as “an attack on the free press, on free opinion and on our open societies.”


Policemen work at the scene after a shooting at the Paris offices of Charlie Hebdo January 7, 2015. (Reuters/Youssef Boudlal)

The NATO head’s statement comes months after the Alliance announced the suspension of all "practical civilian and military cooperation" with the Russian side in April last year.

The move was explained by Russia’s reunion with the republic of Crimea in March 2014 and Moscow’s alleged involvement in the military conflict in southeastern Ukraine.

In May, NATO Deputy Secretary General Aleksander Vershbow said the block had to start treating Russia “as more of an adversary than a partner.”

During his speech at the UN, Barack Obama, the president of the US, which is NATO’s leading member, labeled Russia as the second largest international threat – behind Ebola, but ahead of the jihadist Islamic State.


The military buildup in Poland and the Baltic States saw NATO being labeled as a threat against Russia’s national security in the country’s new military doctrine, released in December.


As for the Ukrainian crisis, Stoltenberg said the situation was “serious,” stressing that it’s “important to do whatever we can to reach a peaceful and negotiated solution.”

The fighting in Ukraine began in April, after the southeastern Donbas and Lugansk regions refused to recognize the new coup-imposed authorities in Kiev.

The death toll in the Ukrainian conflict has exceeded 4,700 people, with over 10,300 wounded, according to UN estimations.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.