Lavrov: NATO's Planned Expansion Into Balkans Is Provocative

*       Reuters
*       Sep. 29 2014 16:00 
*       Last edited 15:59

 

Brendan McDermid / ReutersRussia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov listens to a 
translation during a meeting of the United Nations Security Council at the 69th 
U.N. General Assembly in New York, September 24, 2014. 

SARAJEVO — NATO's potential expansion to the former Yugoslav republics of 
Bosnia, Macedonia and Montenegro could be seen as a "provocation," Russia's 
foreign minister was quoted as saying in a newspaper interview published Monday.

Moscow has opposed any NATO extension to former communist areas of eastern and 
southeastern Europe, part of a competition for geo-strategic influence since 
the end of the Cold War that sits at the heart of the current conflict in 
ex-Soviet Ukraine.

Montenegro, Macedonia and Bosnia share an ambition to join the Western military 
alliance, following in the footsteps of Albania and ex-Yugoslav Croatia, which 
became members in 2009.

Asked about the integration of the three into NATO, Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov told the Bosnian daily Dnevni Avaz: "With regards to the 
expansion of NATO, I see it as a mistake, even a provocation in a way.

"This is, in a way, an irresponsible policy that undermines the determination 
to build a system of equal and shared security in Europe, equal for everyone 
regardless of whether a country is a member of this or that bloc."

Russia has energy interests in the Balkans and historical ties with the Slavs 
of the region, many of them Orthodox Christian like the Russians. But Moscow's 
influence has waned as the countries of the former Yugoslavia seek to join the 
European mainstream with membership of the EU and NATO.

The tiny Adriatic republic of Montenegro appears closest to NATO accession. 
Bosnia's bid is hostage to ethnic bickering that has slowed reforms, while 
Macedonia remains blocked by a long-running dispute with neighboring Greece 
over the name of the landlocked country.

Only Serbia, perhaps Russia's closest ally in the region, is not actively 
pursuing membership of NATO given political sensitivities lingering since the 
alliance's 1999 air war against then-strongman Serbian President Slobodan 
Milosevic to halt a wave of atrocities against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.

Lavrov confirmed that Russian President Vladimir Putin would visit Serbia in 
mid-October to mark the 70th anniversary of Belgrade's liberation from Nazi 
occupation by Yugoslav Partisan fighters and the Soviet army. 

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/lavrov-nato-s-planned-expansion-into-balkans-is-provocative/507995.html

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