Russia is ready to restore contacts with the NATO, when the alliance itself is ready to do the same, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said before leaving the Munich Security Conference.
World leaders gathered in Munich this weekend to discuss the most pressing security issues. During the conference NATO members expressed interest in continuing dialogue with Russia, Lavrov told reporters on Sunday, adding that their interest included military contacts and air space coordination.
However, the most pressing topic of the conference was the Ukrainian crisis in the eastern regions, which has escalated since January. Regarding Kiev’s aspirations to join NATO, Lavrov expressed hope that the US-led bloc's ardent support would not do the Ukrainian government a disservice.
"As for Ukraine in the context of its relations with NATO and the parallels between Ukraine and Georgia, I'd rather refrain from drawing a parallel of this kind," he said. "It was drawn by NATO members in April 2008 when they said in a declaration at the bloc's summit in Bucharest that Georgia and Ukraine would have its membership someday.”
European security can only be built with Russia, not against it - German FM http://t.co/lCxvh6SHAw#MSC2015pic.twitter.com/i8ESKBPvfo
— RT (@RT_com) February 8, 2015
Lavrov said he has no doubt this declaration “played an improper role in the decisions that were made by [then-President] Mikhail Saakashvili when he began a military venture in South Ossetia, including against peacekeepers.”
In 2008, the pro-Western Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili attempted to take South Ossetia by military force, starting the operation with an attack on Russian peacekeepers. The Russian army had to intervene to repel the Georgian attack and re-establish peace. After the 2008 conflict, Russia and a few other countries recognized Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states.
"I very much hope, and I said this in my speech at the conference that such reckless support does not blind the current Ukrainian government," he added.
West sees it’s time to abandon groundless accusations
The West is starting to see that it’s high time to abandon unsubstantiated accusations and talk of punishment over the Ukraine crisis, and instead look at creating a stable system of European security, said Lavrov.
During his many meetings at the Munich conference, Lavrov says: “I felt other moods, as well as understanding that fanning emotions in public, unsubstantiated accusations and calls for punishment are a path to nowhere." Lavrov gave quite a list of contacts who shared that mood naming leaders and ministers from Germany, Italy, Austria, Serbia and Slovenia among them.
On Saturday, Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko presented several “Russian passports” thathe alleged were taken from Russian soldiers found on Ukrainian territory. Poroshenko said it was “best evidence” of aggression.
However, following a query made by Moscow, Kiev failed to provide copies of the passports, said Russia’s Foreign Ministry as quoted by RIA Novosti on Sunday.
Moscow demands copies of ‘Russian soldiers IDs’ shown in Munich http://t.co/88OqhGBW2cpic.twitter.com/QxZC3W8uDx
— RT (@RT_com) February 8, 2015
“Citing ‘mountains of (Russian) lies and propaganda,’ the Ukrainian president stood on a German stage and, well, lied,” Irish journalist and media commentator Bryan MacDonald told RT.
“Russian soldiers cannot use their passports while on active service – they must hand them in. Everybody who has ever lived in Russia knows this. Indeed, even contract soldiers are forced to hand in theirs while on army business and, like the troops, they get a replacement military ID,” he said.
US and EU divided over weapons supply to Ukraine
Washington has been backing Kiev up in their accusations about
the Russian military’s presence in Ukraine, which have been
rebuffed by Moscow on numerous occasions.
READ MORE: Munich conference: Russia ‘hate fest’ or split between Western allies?
Washington is mulling sending lethal aid to the Ukrainian army currently engaged in a military assault on the eastern Donetsk and Lugansk regions. US Secretary John Kerry said on Thursday while visiting Kiev that President Barack Obama’s administration will decide on issue next week.
The divide between the EU and US in their policy towards Ukraine has been increasing of late, Marcus Papadopoulos, publisher and editor of Politics First UK magazine, told RT.
“There is certainly division between the Americans and the Europeans about how to proceed in regard to Ukraine. But it’s very important to note this: Europe is a strategic ally to America, and when push comes to shove, allies will back each other. So if we take the sanctions that were imposed last year in Russia, the Europeans were very reluctant to impose sanctions for economic reasons, but they were fought into it by the Americans,” he said. “Now we are hearing that the US is seriously considering supplying arms to the Ukrainian army and paramilitaries, which would pour more petrol into the fire in Ukraine. But the Europeans are hesitant about that.”
‘US interested in keeping #Ukraine an open war as means of demoralizing Russia’ (Op-Edge) http://t.co/y9rqFSop0Hpic.twitter.com/iT1bZciKbq
— RT (@RT_com) February 8, 2015
Papadopoulos believes that the long-term solution to the crisis would lie in Washington’s decision to abandon the objective of trying to bring Ukraine into the West’s orbit and into NATO.
“That’s why there is a crisis in Ukraine today. Ever since Ukraine’s independence in 1991, the American government has spent billions of dollars trying to lure Ukraine away from Russia into the EU, into NATO in order to weaken Russia on its western borders,” he said. “That would be a severe threat to Russia’s security and Russia will not tolerate it.”