Russian President Vladimir Putin wants “to use winter as a
weapon of war” in his campaign in Ukraine, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg
has said in Bucharest ahead of a meeting of the alliance’s foreign
ministers.
“We have to be prepared for more refugees
crossing into the rest of Europe, as a result of Russia’s deliberate
attack on critical services, heating, light, water, gas in Ukraine,”
Stoltenberg said on Tuesday.
Stoltenberg’s remarks came
as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his NATO counterparts were
gathered in Romania to drum up urgently needed support for Ukraine aimed
at ensuring that Moscow fails to defeat the country as it bombards
energy infrastructure.
“NATO’s door is open. Russia does
not have a veto on countries joining,” Stoltenberg said in reference to
the recent entry of North Macedonia and Montenegro into the security
alliance.
He said that Russian President Vladimir Putin “will get
Finland and Sweden as NATO members” soon. The Nordic neighbours applied
for membership in April, concerned that Russia might target them next.
“We stand by that, too, on membership for Ukraine,” the former Norwegian prime minister said.
In essence,
Stoltenberg repeated a vow made by NATO leaders in Bucharest in 2008 —
in the same sprawling Palace of the Parliament where the foreign
ministers are meeting this week — that Ukraine, and also Georgia, would
join the alliance one day.
Some officials and
analysts believe this move — pressed on the NATO allies by former US
President George W Bush — was partly responsible for the war that Russia
launched on Ukraine in February.
Stoltenberg, however,
disagreed. “President Putin cannot deny sovereign nations to make their
own sovereign decisions that are not a threat to Russia,” he said. “I
think what he’s afraid of is democracy and freedom, and that’s the main
challenge for him.”
More US aid
During the two-day meeting, US officials said Secretary Blinken will announce substantial American aid for Ukraine’s energy grid.
Ukraine’s network has been battered countrywide since early October by
targeted Russian strikes, in what US officials call a Russian campaign
to weaponise the coming winter cold.“We are all paying a
price for Russia’s war against Ukraine. But the price we pay is in
money,” Stoltenberg said, adding: “While the price Ukrainians pay is a
price paid in blood.”
The
meeting in Romania — which shares NATO’s longest land border with
Ukraine — is likely to see NATO make fresh pledges of non-lethal support
to Ukraine: fuel, generators, medical supplies, winter equipment and
drone-jamming devices.
Individual allies are also likely to announce fresh supplies of military equipment for Ukraine — chiefly the air defence systems that Kiev so
desperately seeks to protect its skies — but NATO, as an organisation,
will not, to avoid being dragged into a wider war with Russia.The ministers will hold a working dinner with their Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, on Tuesday evening.
Source: TRTWorld and agencies
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