Support within NATO

Published: 20 October 2001 y., Saturday
Some Western commentators have expressed concern that Russia's inclusion within the international coalition against terrorism will lead to it demanding concessions from the U.S. in areas such as NATO enlargement. These fears seem to be increasingly unwarranted as the range of Western countries that have voiced their support for the inclusion of the Baltic states continues to grow. There are even indications that Russian President Vladimir Putin may be withdrawing his "red line" to the CIS, which would no longer include the Baltic states within its sphere of influence. At that meeting, the representatives of the three Baltic states drafted a position statement that argued that at the summit scheduled for November 2002 in Prague NATO should invite all nine aspirant states to join at the same time and not individually. The Baltic republics initially looked to the U.S., Scandinavian countries, and Central European NATO members Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary as their main supporters in their bid for NATO membership. On recent visits to the Baltic states, Polish President Aleksandr Kwasniewski and Polish Foreign Minister Wladyslaw Bartoszewski both came out strongly in favor of Baltic membership. These views were also expressed by Hungarian Defense Minister Janos Szabo to the Hungarian parliament earlier this month. Scandinavia has been at the forefront of promoting the Baltic states within NATO. At a Helsinki summit in August, Foreign Ministers from Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, and Finland expressed their firm support for the Balts to be included within NATO. Support within NATO has expanded beyond the Central Europe and Scandinavia. Then-Turkish President Suleyman Demirel told his visiting Estonian counterpart as early as October 1998 that he rejected any Russian veto over NATO enlargement and therefore, "I have supported Estonia's wish to become a full member of NATO." Germany and France initially expressed Russophile views that argued against Baltic membership. German officials reiterated that Russian "consent" would be required for further NATO enlargement, a statement in clear contradiction of NATO's "open door" policy. The German position has gradually evolved into cautious support, and France too now officially supports Baltic membership in NATO.
Šaltinis: rferl.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Baltic states rejoice as they join NATO, while Russia fumes

Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia are among seven former Soviet bloc countries formally joining NATO on Monday more »

EU wants UN to have bigger role in Iraq

European Union leaders called yesterday for a new Security Council resolution to support an increased UN role in Iraq more »

Azerbaijani president critical of OSCE Minsk Group

Azerbaijani President has criticized the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe for its role in trying to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict more »

The Visit

At the beginning of his tour of Central Asia, Patten urged regional governments to tackle the issue of human rights more »

Russia Warns America Over Caspian Sea

The United States should not interfere in talks on delineating the oil-rich Caspian Sea, a top Russian diplomat said in an interview published Tuesday more »

Enlargement and Beyond

April 28-30, on the eve of the greatest enlargement in European Union history, the European Economic Summit will be held in Warsaw more »

Poles 'back down' on EU charter

Poland has said it may drop its opposition over voting rights to allow a deal on a new EU constitution more »

Commission warns new member states on farm payments

The European Commission on Thursday issued a strong warning to new member states saying that if they do not implement certain measures, the EU money to which they are entitled cannot be paid more »

Adzharia, Georgia Agree to Crisis Talks

Abashidze, flanked by Burdzhanadze, speaking after eight hours of talks Wednesday more »

The annual 60th session

Russia will raise at the United Nations Human Rights Commission the question of non-observance of the rights of ethnic minorities in Latvia and Estonia more »