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http://www.latimes.com/news/asection/20010529/t000044869.html

"NATO is stating constantly that this
military-political organization poses no threat to
Russia. But then the question naturally arises: If
there is no threat coming from Russia, then for what
reason does this organization need to enlarge itself?"


Los Angeles Times 
Tuesday, May 29, 2001 
NATO Get-Together in Baltics Has Russia Miffed,
Staying Away 
 Military: Venue for meeting of lawmakers raises
hackles in Kremlin, which opposes plans for any
expansion into ex-Soviet Union. 


By JOHN DANISZEWSKI, Times Staff Writer


MOSCOW--Don't look now, but NATO is invading. 
For the first time, NATO's Parliamentary Assembly has
met on the territory of the former Soviet Union--in
Vilnius, Lithuania--and the chief question before it
is how the alliance should expand. 
     It is a topic and setting that has ruffled
feathers in Moscow, which remains adamant that there
is no reason for the Atlantic alliance to keep getting
bigger--and especially no reason that the former
Soviet republics of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia
should join. 
     A spokesman for the assembly, Keith Williams,
said the meeting, which has drawn about 250 lawmakers
from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's 19
member states and from 16 of the assembly's 17
"partner" states, is more than a symbolic gesture. 
     "The assembly as a whole is in favor of NATO's
enlargement," he said. "Our pitch is, yes, we must
keep the door open and, yes, we must enlarge." 
     Only parliament members from Russia have
boycotted the meeting, saying their presence in
Vilnius might be misinterpreted as acquiescence to
Lithuania's eventual admission to NATO. 
     NATO Secretary-General George Robertson has
visited Moscow twice in the past year and intends to
come again next week, in part to assuage Russian
concerns about enlargement. "It is absolutely wrong to
present NATO expansion as an expansion of a hostile
military bloc eager to surround Russia on all sides,"
he said during his last visit, in February. 
     But Russian Defense Minister Sergei B. Ivanov
remains unconvinced. At a news conference Monday in
Moscow, he reiterated that such statements contain a
basic contradiction. 
     "NATO constantly is stating that this
military-political organization poses no threat to
Russia. But then the question naturally arises: If
there is no threat coming from Russia, then for what
reason does this organization need to enlarge itself?"

     While there is no practical consequence to
holding the assembly's spring session in the
Lithuanian capital, the symbolism is alarming to
Russia, said Andrei V. Kortunov, president of the
Russian Science Foundation, a political think tank in
Moscow. "This will add more weight to the existing
suspicions that the Baltic countries may join NATO in
the very nearest future," he said. 
     The meeting in Vilnius has been an emotional shot
in the arm to Lithuania, a country of 3.6 million
people where almost all political factions support
joining NATO. 
     Williams, speaking by telephone from Vilnius,
said hundreds of people had gathered in front of the
meeting venue, a contemporary arts center, in an
emotion-tinged demonstration that recalled the mass
public displays in favor of independence from the
Soviet Union in 1991. 
     The NATO meeting is "of tremendous importance,"
Lithuania's parliament speaker, Arturas Paulauskas,
said in a telephone interview. He called it a chance
to show off Lithuania's achievements since recovering
its independence from Moscow. "I am sure this will
significantly help us to move closer to the desired
goal of joining NATO." 
     Russia was upset in 1999 when former Warsaw Pact
members Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic were
allowed to join NATO. But it is even more worried
about the consequences of admitting the three Baltic
states, which are hoping for a formal invitation to
join NATO next year. 
     With Poland as a member, NATO has a shared border
with Russia's Kaliningrad exclave. But the admission
of the Baltic states would move NATO's frontier about
400 miles to the northeast, brushing up against the
main part of Russia--and only about 100 miles from the
country's unofficial second capital, St. Petersburg. 
     Chances that at least one of the three Baltic
countries will get an invitation to join NATO are
believed to have improved with the election of
President George W. Bush. Several prominent Republican
Party figures have spoken out in favor of expansion,
and Bush is on record as saying, "No part of Europe
will be excluded [from NATO] because of history or
geography." 
     A NATO summit scheduled for Prague, the Czech
capital, in November 2002 is expected to determine
whether to invite up to nine states into the alliance.
The hopefuls, all formerly run by Communists, are
Albania, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Macedonia, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. 
     A draft resolution prepared for the Vilnius
meeting endorses NATO expansion, asserting that the
admission of Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic
proved a positive step toward "enhancing peace and
stability in the entire Euro-Atlantic region." 
     Besides NATO enlargement, the assembly--whose
meetings began Sunday and continue through
Thursday--is to discuss European security, the
formation of a European Union "rapid-reaction"
military force, Bush's U.S. missile defense concept,
and the political and military situation in the
Balkans. 
     The assembly is made up of 214 parliament members
from the 19 member countries and 73 others from the 17
"associated" states. Established in 1955, the assembly
has no formal status within NATO's structures but is a
forum for lawmakers to build consensus on topics
related to the alliance and European security. 


* * *
     Sergei L. Loiko and Yakov Ryzhak of The Times'
Moscow Bureau contributed to this report. 
Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times  


 

  
 
 



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