Russia
wants answers on NATO troop movement in Eastern Europe
The
statement comes after the USS Truxtun destroyer started a military
exercises in March with the Bulgarian and Romanian navies a few
hundred miles from Russian forces of the Black Sea Fleet.
Russia
expects detailed explanations from NATO regarding expanding its
military presence in Eastern Europe, said Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov. The statement comes after NATO bloc announced boosting
its military presence in the area.
RT,
3
April, 2014
"We
have addressed questions to the North Atlantic military alliance. We
are not only expecting answers, but answers that will be based fully
on respect for the rules we agreed on," Lavrov
told reports at a joint briefing with Kazakhstan’s FM Yerlan
Idrisov.
However,
NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he had not received any
questions from Moscow.
In response he called Russian accusations about NATO's actions "propaganda and disinformation."
In response he called Russian accusations about NATO's actions "propaganda and disinformation."
He
denied that NATO was violating the 1997 treaty on NATO-Russian
cooperation by boosting its forces in Eastern Europe.
The
accusations by Russia, he said, are based “on
a wrong interpretation” of
a fundamental act of the 1997 treaty on NATO-Russian cooperation, in
which NATO vowed to provide collective defense by using
reinforcements rather than by additional permanent stationing of
substantial combat forces at regular bases.
Lavrov's
statement came after the NATO chief, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said the
bloc will deploy more
troops to Eastern Europe. According to him, NATO is
considering “revised
operational plans, military maneuvers and adequate troop
reinforcements.” This
military buildup was approved by many eastern European countries. On
April 1, Polish PM Donald Tusk praised the NATO presence in the
country.
After
the announcement of deploying troops in Ukraine, NATO also said that
it is suspending all
military and civilian cooperation with Russia over the Ukrainian
crisis, a move that was immediately blasted by Moscow who said that
neither Russia, not NATO would benefit from such a step. Russia
called this move reminiscent of Cold War language.
Lavrov
also called upon the world’s powers to abide by the rules of the
Montreux Convention, which allows a warship of any non-Black Sea
country to stay in the region for only 21 day.
“US
warships have recently extended their presence in the Black Sea
several times,” he
said, “This
extension didn’t always obey the rules of the Montreux Convention."
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
(RIA Novosti / Grigoriy Sisoev)
Meanwhile,
Lavrov also responded to Western criticism over the presence of
Russian troops along the border with Ukraine, saying that the EU and
Kiev should not stir up a conflict surrounding Russian drills
launched in the south of the country.
According
to the Russian FM, Russia had the right to move forces on its
territory, and furthermore the troops would return to their permanent
bases after completing military exercises.
“There
are no restrictions on Russia’s troop displacement on Russian
territory,” he
said.
In
March, Russia’s Defense Ministry launched artillery drills in the
southern military district, which involved some 8,500 troops and a
large amount of hardware. It coincided with war games conducted by
the country’s Airborne Troops.
Although
Russia has repeatedly denied any troop build-up on the borders with
Ukraine, as well as plans to send any troops into Ukraine, the West
has been turning a deaf ear to the claims.
Lavrov
also commented on the crisis situation in Ukraine, saying that all
its regions should be taking part in the constitutional process.
“We
are all convinced that constitutional reform should be proper, not
“cosmetic,” it is necessary to stabilize the situation in Ukraine
and overcome the crisis,” he
added.
According
to Lavrov, it is necessary to remind the Ukrainian authorities that
constitutional reform was written in the February-21 agreement on the
crisis settlement, which was signed by ousted president Yanukovich
and opposition leaders, including Arseny Yatsenyuk and Vladimir
Klitschko, on ending the political crisis in the country. The
agreement was witnessed by EU foreign ministers from Germany and
Poland.
Tense Rhetoric Escalates as Russia Mocks NATO’s ‘Cold War Mindset’
2
April, 2014
NATO-Russia
relations continue to get worse for no apparent reason today, as NATO
officials keep
warning Russia against invading Ukraine,
despite Russia repeatedly reassuring them that this isn’t being
considered.
The
warnings and the nonsensical
predictions of
imminent Russian military action have not escaped Russian notice, and
the Foreign Ministry issued a statement mocking the “Cold War
mindset” of the alliance.
Foreign
Ministry spokesman
Alexander Lukashevich reacted
to the latest NATO announcement that they are cutting cooperation
with Russia with comparative indifference, noting NATO did the exact
same thing after the brief Russo-Georgian War before calming down.
Noteworthy
is that as NATO hyped the ties they are cutting and the future cuts
in relations, the Foreign Ministry made no suggestion Russia was even
considering any retaliatory measures, and the nation is seemingly
content to just wait for the alliance to tire itself out.
Medvedev:
Russia Wants Good Economic Ties With US, EU
Trade
Shouldn't Be a Victim of 'Political Prejudices'
2
April, 2014
The
US seems set to impose more sanctions on Russia, as the House of
Representatives has sent a bill on the matter to the White House.
US-Russian trade being so small, the move is likely a non-factor.
Pushes
for ever-more sanctions against Russia have proven extremely
controversial in Europe, where Western nations have embraced the
idea, but many eastern nations see serious economic harm coming from
tit-for-tat sanctions.
Russia
insists it doesn’t want a sanctions war either, with Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev saying that his government doesn’t see any reason
trade should “be a victim of political prejudices.”
Medvedev,
who made the comments at an investment conference, went on to say
that Russia hopes to continue to have good economic relations with
both the US and the EU.
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