Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 19 – Dmitry Peskov,
Vladimir Putin’s press secretary, says that Russian wants to receive “a 100
percent guarantee” that “no one will think about Ukraine entering NATO.” The only proper response to that outrageous
example of imperial overreach is to offer NATO full membership in the alliance
immediately.
To do otherwise at this point is to
recognize a Russian sphere of influence, to undercut the ability of other
countries which live around Russia’s periphery to make their own choices, and
to put ever more of them at risk of becoming victims of Russian aggression. Still
worse, it is to betray the brave people of Ukraine and the principles the West
has long proclaimed.
Peshkov told the BBC World Service
that up to now, no one has given such guarantees – a remarkably explicit
indication of just how much Moscow has been lying about what supposedly
happened in the early 1990s – and made it clear that Moscow’s goals are far
greater than just Ukraine (echo.msk.ru/news/1439860-echo.html).
“We want to hear that NATO will stop
moving toward Russia’s borders, that NATO will stop its efforts at violating the
balance of forces. But unfortunately, we have not heard that,” Peskov said.
Tragically, many in the West earlier
accepted the notion that Russia should have a say in who is a member of the
Western alliance and who is not, thus giving Moscow a privileged position
relative to the peoples of the countries living around the Russian Federation,
and many also accepted the idea that a country had to “qualify” for a defense
alliance.
One does not “qualify” for
membership in a defense alliance. One becomes part of it because it can make a
contribution of one or another kind or because it faces the kind of threats
from the same source that the alliance was established to repel. Indeed, the
notion of “qualifying” appears to have been introduced to slow down the growth
of NATO.
Those who oppose standing up to
Putin’s aggression in Ukraine by taking such a step might do well to remember
that when Hitler trampled on the Munich agreement by occupying Czechoslovakia,
Neville Chamberlain, long the poster child for appeasement, announced that
Britain was issuing security guarantees to all countries Berlin was
threatening.
Are we in the West going to do less
than that?
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