NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia would mean a "colossal
geopolitical shift," Russia's foreign minister said Wednesday, as
lawmakers signaled to Kiev that bilateral relations would suffer if
it joined the military alliance.
"We have said more than once that every country has the right to
take sovereign decisions on who will be its partner in the
international arena," Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in a
speech before the State Duma, or lower house of parliament.
"At the same time, the acceptance into NATO of Ukraine and
Georgia will mean a colossal geopolitical shift and we assess such
steps from the point of view of our interests," he said.
Ukraine's pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko, who came to
office in January 2005 in the wake of Orange Revolution protests
after beating his Kremlin-backed opponent, has made NATO membership
a top priority for his former Soviet nation of 47 million.
His government hopes to receive an invitation to join NATO in
2008, a prospect that has alarmed Moscow, which is already smarting
at the eastward enlargement of the Brussels-based alliance into its
former Soviet bloc satellites.
Georgia, a former Soviet Caucasus Mountain state that has allied
itself with the United States, is also seeking NATO membership.
Both Ukraine and Georgia neighbor Russia.
Earlier Wednesday, State Duma lawmakers voted unanimously, 435-0
with one abstention, for a resolution that criticized Ukraine's
plans to join NATO, saying such a step would "lead to very negative
consequences for relations between our fraternal peoples."
"We are not dictating to our Ukrainian colleagues how to act, we
only consider it necessary to express our attitude towards Ukraine
joining NATO," said Andrei Kokoshin, head of the Duma's committee
on relations with the Commonwealth of Independent States, a
grouping of 12 ex-Soviet states.
In Kiev, officials expressed astonishment at the parliamentary
move.
"I am very much surprised with such a decision by the Russian
parliament," Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Anton Buteiko
said.
"When the Russian leader says that NATO does not pose a threat
to security, I cannot imagine how Ukraine's integration with NATO
can turn this organization into a threat to Russian security," he
added.
Meanwhile, Russian ultranationalist lawmaker Vladimir
Zhirinovsky became the latest Russian to be barred from Ukraine for
participating in anti-NATO protests on Ukrainian territory, the
State Security Service said.
"Let those who don't respect Ukraine be kept out of our
country," Buteiko said.
(China Daily June 8, 2006)