Kremlin identifies ‘red line’ in
NATO-Russia relations
NATO created a situation Russia “couldn’t
tolerate any more,” Putin's spokesman clams
By RT
January 18, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- NATO’s “gradual
invasion” into Ukraine has brought the US-led bloc
right up to Moscow’s “red line,” the Kremlin has
told CNN. President Vladimir Putin's spokesman says
the situation poses an imminent threat to European
security.
In an interview aired on Sunday, Dmitry Peskov
cited
documented Western promises, which, he noted,
have never been “fixed in a legally binding
way,” that NATO would not expand further
eastwards into the former Soviet bloc. In contrast
to these pledges, over the past few years, NATO has
used its ‘open door policy’ to absorb several former
Warsaw Pact countries.
Moscow has drawn the line at Ukraine, Peskov told
the American broadcaster.
“First, there were just words but with time
we have seen the gradual invasion of NATO into
Ukrainian territory, with its infrastructure, with
its instructors, with supplies of defensive and
offensive weapons, teaching [the] Ukrainian military
and so on,” Peskov said.
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Putin's long time spokesman went on to say that
these moves have brought NATO directly “to the
red line,” creating a situation which
constitutes a “real threat” both for Russia
and for the whole “European [security]
architecture.” Russia has a 3,000-km border
with Ukraine, which, until the Ukrainian war broke
out in 2014, was almost completely unfortified.
These circumstances, which Moscow “couldn’t
tolerate anymore,” prompted Putin's team to
come up with a set of proposals to improve
collective security, Peskov said.
The proposals include guarantees that NATO will
not expand eastwards and that no former Soviet
country bordering Russia would be permitted to join
the alliance. The US, as well as NATO – which Peskov
called “a weapon of confrontation” on
Sunday – have already rejected these particular
proposals. Unless a compromise is found, Peskov said
tensions will only escalate further.
Peskov also said during the interview that Moscow
“will be ready to take counter-actions”
should NATO deployments to Ukraine continue, though
he stressed that this does not mean all-out military
action.
At the start of the interview, Zakaria told
Peskov that, according to “some people,”
Russia has “created this crisis” Itself.
Kiev and Washington have insisted for months that
Russia has been amassing troops at the Ukrainian
border, in preparation for an invasion. Moscow has
repeatedly denied having plans to invade its
neighbor. Peskov once again dismissed the idea on
Sunday, pointing the finger at NATO instead for
threatening Russia’s security over the past two
decades.
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