https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202204/1259415.shtml 

US leverages Ukraine crisis for NATO expansion, to push Europe further into 
chaos
By Carlos Martinez
Published: Apr 15, 2022 02:20 PM   
Cause of war Cartoon: Liu Rui/GT


NATO was formed in 1949, just four years after the end of World War II, to 
provide military infrastructure for the US-led Cold War alliance. Its existence 
allowed the positioning of American troops and weaponry in Europe, ready for 
rapid deployment against the Soviet Union and the newly formed People's 
Democracies in Eastern and Central Europe.

NATO's purported raison d'ĂȘtre was to protect its members from Soviet 
aggression and expansion. Yet when the Soviet Union collapsed and the Warsaw 
Pact dissolved in 1991, there was no serious discussion about disbanding NATO. 
Indeed NATO only became more aggressive.

Nobody can seriously argue that NATO is fundamentally defensive in character. 
It is an aggressive, nuclear alliance designed to enforce US hegemony.

In the decades following the Soviet collapse, NATO has expanded from 16 
countries to 30 - reneging on repeated promises made to the Soviet and Russian 
leadership in the early 1990s that NATO's borders would move "not one inch" 
East of Germany. In fact NATO's borders have moved right up to Russia's 
doorsteps.

This process of NATO expansion is the underlying cause of the current crisis in 
Europe. In 2014, the US supported a coup in Ukraine that brought a pro-West 
government to power. This government was from the beginning explicit about its 
intention to join NATO. 

The Russian government made it abundantly clear that Ukraine joining NATO would 
cross a red line in terms of Russia's security concerns, given the two 
countries shared a 2,000-kilometer border. 

Russia repeatedly called for dialogue with Ukraine, the US and NATO in order to 
address its legitimate concerns, but these requests were rebuffed. Meanwhile 
NATO conducted several joint military exercises with the Ukrainian army.

This is the trigger for Russia's military operation in Ukraine. South African 
President Cyril Ramaphosa stated bluntly that the current war "could have been 
avoided if NATO had heeded the warnings from amongst its own leaders and 
officials over the years that its eastward expansion would lead to greater, not 
less, instability in the region."

China has consistently called on all protagonists in the Ukraine crisis to 
acknowledge the principle of indivisible security. Ukraine joining NATO would 
be a threat to Russia's security, and therefore it must be taken off the table 
and Ukraine should commit to neutrality. As Columbia University professor 
Jeffrey Sachs says, Ukrainian neutrality will help to keep NATO and Russia 
separated - "a positive good for all parties, and for the world."

Going forward, the peoples of the world may well ask themselves whether a 
stable peace is possible while NATO continues to exist. As Chinese Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs spokesperson Wang Wenbin noted recently: "NATO serves no other 
purpose than war. It has never contributed to peace and security of our world 
and will never do so."

The crisis in Ukraine is caused primarily by NATO's aggression and expansion. 
Achieving lasting peace means checking that aggression and expansion; however, 
the US is leveraging the war as an elaborate advertisement for NATO, promoting 
a bloc-based version of collective security premised on opposing Russia. Sweden 
and Finland have long thrived under a policy of military non-alignment, but 
they are now coming under pressure to discard neutrality in favor of NATO 
membership. Such a policy will foment collective insecurity and push the 
European continent further into chaos.

Collective security was the global watch-word in the aftermath of World War II 
and the defeat of German fascism and Japanese militarism. However, collective 
security cannot work on the basis of division and exclusive blocs, in which the 
security of one country compromises the security of another. For that very 
reason, the Soviet Union offered to join NATO in 1954, a year before the 
establishment of the Warsaw Pact. What Europe needs is a collective security 
mechanism that includes the entire continent, has a legitimate basis in 
international law, and pays attention to the legitimate security concerns and 
national rights of all parties.

The minimum, immediate condition for peace in Europe is to guarantee no further 
expansion of NATO. In the longer term, Cold War blocs such as NATO and AUKUS 
should be dismantled, so that humanity might realize its long-cherished common 
dream of global peace.

The author is a British author and independent political commentator. 
[email protected]



Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

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