newsweek.com
<https://www.newsweek.com/russia-nato-aggression-never-repeated-us-rallies-a
llies-1578566>  


Russia Warns NATO Aggression Must 'Never Be Repeated' as U.S. Rallies
Alliance


Tom O'Connor

8-10 minutes

  _____  

Russia has issued a warning against a repeat of the NATO
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/nato>  Western military alliance's bombing
campaign of Yugoslavia on its 22nd anniversary, as Washington's top diplomat
seeks to rally the alliance for the first time under the banner of U.S.
President Joe Biden <https://www.newsweek.com/topic/joe-biden> 's
administration.

"Such evil, as NATO's aggression against Yugoslavia, must never be
repeated," Moscow's embassy in Belgrade, then the Yugoslav capital and today
the capital of Serbia, said in a statement Wednesday in reference to the
1999 NATO attack on the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

The statement argued that the attack violated "the basic principles of
international law established in the UN Charter, the Helsinki Final Act and
other international documents."

The air campaign was launched in response to accusations that Yugoslav
security forces had conducted a campaign of ethnic cleansing against ethnic
Albanians in the fight against the separatist Kosovo Liberation Army. Both
Russia and China used their permanent United Nations
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/united-nations>  Security Council member
privileges to veto international action, arguing a need for peaceful
settlement rather than the use of force.

NATO went ahead anyway, with Moscow protesting to this day.

"During the 78 days of the barbaric bombing, which was cynically portrayed
as a 'humanitarian intervention in the name of rescuing refugees,' about two
thousand civilians were killed," the embassy said. "A significant part of
the country's infrastructural and industrial capacity was destroyed.
Thousands of civilian buildings were destroyed. The use of depleted uranium
ammunition has led to irreversible contamination in a number of land and
groundwater regions."

New York-based monitor Human Rights Watch placed the number of Yugoslav
civilians killed at around 500, though local authorities at the time placed
the figure closer to the Russian estimate.

Included in the collateral damage of the campaign was China's embassy in
Belgrade, where U.S. bombs killed at least three Chinese nationals and
injured over two dozen more.



The sky over the former Yugoslav capital Belgrade, now the capital of
Serbia, is illuminated red as smoke rises from a refinery at the industrial
complex in the suburb of Pancevo after a NATO attack, early April 18, 1999.
The intervention, which began on March 24, targeted Yugoslav security forces
accused of conducting an ethnic cleansing campaign against ethnic Albanians.
SRDJAN SUKI/AFP/Getty Images 

The statement also complained of "enormous damage" not only to physical
infrastructure but also "to the architecture of peace and security in Europe
and to international stability."

The bombing, Russia argued, paved the way for further interventions across
the globe, including "a whole series of Western operations with the
implementation of the forces initiated under propagandist pronunciation,
without the approval of the UN Security Council or with the perverted
interpretation of the mandate assigned by the UNSC."

"Russia will continue to resolutely advocate strict adherence to universal
international legal norms, such as the principle of non-interference in the
internal affairs of sovereign states," the embassy said. "In that context,
we will support all efforts that will contribute to Belgrade and Pristina
achieving a sustainable and mutually acceptable solution that meets the
interests of the people of Serbia and international law."

In a tweet, Russian permanent representative to the United Nations Mikhail
Ulyanov called then-Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov's decision to cancel
high-level talks in the U.S. over the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia "the first
real and truly resonant step towards a U-turn of Russian foreign policy
towards the protection of the civilized world order based on international
law and the national interests of Russia."

To mark a decade since the NATO bombing of Libya, the Russian embassy in
Washington recently accused the alliance of wrongly pursuing regime change
against longtime Libyan leader Muammar el-Qaddafi "to the most devastating
consequences" in remarks recently shared with
<https://www.newsweek.com/west-libya-bombing-ten-years-ago-putin-showdown-mi
deast-1577266> Newsweek.

Amid tense ties with NATO today, Konstantin Gavrilov, the head of the
Russian delegation to the Vienna Negotiations on Military Security and Arms
Control, criticized what he called NATO's "policy of 'containment of the
Russian Federation" during a Wednesday meeting of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe's Forum for Security Cooperation. Such an
approach, he argued, was "counterproductive and only weakens stability in
Europe."

He called on NATO to choose between "either containment or dialogue with our
country."

But that same day, the alliance was hosting a high-profile guest for the
first time, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/antony-blinken> , who told reporters he "had
a lengthy discussion about Russia" with his counterparts.

"I think we all expect our relationship with Russia to remain a challenge
into the foreseeable future, but it's one that we're prepared for," Blinken
said. "And ultimately, I think what we can hope is to have a relationship
with Russia that is at least predictable and stable, and so given that, our
intent is to engage Russia in ways that advance our interests while
remaining very clear-eyed about the challenges that it poses."

He later named some specific areas of contention between Washington and
Moscow, warning of "new military capabilities and strategies Russia has
developed to challenge our alliances and undermine the rules-based order
that ensures our collective security."

"These include Moscow's aggression in eastern Ukraine, its build-up of
forces, large-scale exercises, and acts of intimidation in the Baltic and
Black Sea, the Eastern Mediterranean, the High North, its modernization of
nuclear capabilities, and its use of chemical weapons against critics on
NATO soil," Blinken said.

He also accused Russia of using "disinformation to erode confidence in
elections and in safe, effective vaccines."

The Biden administration has sought to reinvigorate U.S.-NATO ties that were
strained under former President Donald Trump
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/donald-trump> , and has lashed out at
Russian President Vladimir Putin
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/vladimir-putin> , agreeing that he is "a
killer" and warning he would "pay a price" for allegedly interfering in the
2020 U.S. election.

 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks after a meeting of NATO
foreign ministers at NATO headquarters in Brussels on March 24. The talks
come as Washington and Moscow undergo a crisis in relations early into the
administration of U.S. President Joe Biden, an avowed critic of his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin. VIRGINIA MAYO/Pool/AFP/Getty Images 

Putin provided an unusual answer.

"As for the statements of my American colleague, how would I respond to
him?" Putin asked rhetorically. "I would say to him: 'Be healthy!' I wish
him good health."

He then warned, "Whatever you call me is what you are called yourself," and
recounted a selective history of the United States, including mass killings
of Native Americans, the enslavement of African Americans and the use of
nuclear weapons in combat. Putin himself is accused of orchestrating the
killing of dissidents, as well as the attempted poisoning of opposition
leader Alexei Navalny <https://www.newsweek.com/topic/alexei-navalny> .

Biden's comments have spurred outrage in Moscow, where Putin has challenged
Biden to a live discussion, an offer that has yet to be accepted.

White House national security adviser told MSNBC
<https://www.newsweek.com/topic/msnbc>  on Monday he expected "to have tough
days with Russia, because there are issues on which we profoundly disagree
and actions we need to respond to forcefully."

His Russian counterpart Nikolai Patrushev said Wednesday that such comments
indicated that Washington was seeking and planning for such an outcome.

"And if they are planning that, they can implement that, but then they will
be responsible for the steps that they would take," Patrushev said,
according to the state-run Tass Russian News Agency.

He left the door open for cooperation, however.

"We are committed to constructive cooperation that would take into account
the interests of each of the parties and that would be equal," he said. "Let
me emphasize that we haven't taken any hostile steps against the United
States, we are not taking any now, nor are we planning to take any in the
future."

 

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