Ukraine’s membership in NATO in any way, shape or form is unacceptable to Russia and cannot be part of any peace proposal, Moscow’s permanent representative to the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, has said.
Addressing a UN Security Council meeting on the situation in Ukraine, Nebenzia brought up statements by Vladimir Zelensky that Kiev either needed membership in the US-led bloc, or nuclear weapons.
“Ukraine’s membership in the North Atlantic Alliance in any territorial form is absolutely unacceptable to Russia and cannot be part of any peace plans or mediation initiatives,” Nebenzia said at Monday’s meeting.
The Russian envoy also argued that Zelensky’s “nuclear blackmail” amounted to a public declaration of Ukraine’s intent to violate the non-proliferation treaty (NPT), and proved right Moscow’s decision to launch its military operation, made “following similar nuclear threats from the Ukrainian leadership,” he noted.
“Security threats to our country cannot be eliminated without the demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine, and without ensuring that the rights and freedoms of all Ukrainian citizens are observed,” Nebenzia told the Security Council.
The Russian diplomat called Zelensky’s “victory plan” nothing but an attempt to drag NATO into “a direct, rather than a proxy conflict” with Russia. He accused the Ukrainian leader of risking plunging the entire world into a nuclear apocalypse just to hold onto power.
Nebenzia approvingly quoted the words of Polish President Andrzej Duda, who described Ukraine as a drowning person, “dragging down to the depths those who are trying to help it.”
Russia is ready and willing to have good-neighborly relations with a neutral and non-hostile Ukraine, as had been enshrined in the Ukrainian constitution and other bilateral treaties, the Russian diplomat said. However, Kiev repudiated all of those documents after the 2014 US-backed coup, and thus ensured Ukraine’s “slide into the mire of crisis, lawlessness, extreme nationalism and civil war.”
The US and its allies have supplied Ukraine with almost $200 billion worth of military, financial and economic aid, while insisting this does not make them party to the conflict with Russia. In its latest declaration this July in Washington, NATO described Kiev’s membership as “inevitable,” but only “when the allies agree and conditions are met.” At least one member of the bloc, Slovakia, has said it would veto Ukraine’s membership because it would lead to a direct conflict with Russia.