Portuguese Air Force fighter F-16 (R) and Royal Canadian Air Force fighter CF-18 Hornet patrol over Baltics air space |
NATO has suspended
cooperation with Russia
since the Ukraine
crisis escalated. In response, it boosted its military exercises on regions concerning
its 28-member nations. In retaliation, Russia , seeing the military
maneuverings as provocations, likewise did the same. Frequent Russian air and
sea patrols around Europe have raised the risk
of an aviation or marine disaster.
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier hinted that NATO should take the first step to
open a dialogue with Russia .
"I think we are obliged to ... take care that a conflict does
not get out of control and lead to a military escalation,"
he told reporters at a meeting of NATO foreign ministers, noting the
alliance should seek channels to verify the reports were true or not.
Slovak Prime
Minister Robert Fico said on Tuesday that the ongoing military war posturings
between NATO and Russia ,
triggered by the Crimea crisis, could grow into a larger conflict that
isn't just focused on Russia
and Ukraine
anymore. "The probability of a military conflict is 70 percent,"
he told a forum hosted by daily newspaper Hospodarske Noviny. "I
am talking about a large military conflict now; I am not talking about
a Russia-Ukraine conflict."
Since the Crimea crisis erupted, Russian ambassadors met with NATO
only twice. Jens Stoltenberg, NATO secretary-general, had repeatedly said the
alliance doesn't seek confrontation with Russia and neither does it want a
new Cold War. "But we cannot compromise on the principles
on which the security and peace in Europe
have been based for many decades," he told a news conference.
Dennis J D Sandole,
a professor of Conflict Resolution and International Relations for the School
for Conflict Analysis and Resolution of George Mason University, wrote in
Financial Times that NATO should negotiate with President Vladimir Putin a
Euro-Atlantic security structure that includes Russia ,
which could be a sure win potential solution to end the Ukraine crisis.
He reminded that former Russian president Boris Yeltsin, in December 1991, had
hinted that Russia 's
membership in NATO was "a long-term political aim." He said even Mr
Putin seemed to approve of it. "The implication is, if Russia were
inside the house, it would have a stake in preserving it, and not what it is
doing at present: destabilising it."
Alexander Grushko, Russia 's
Ambassador to NATO, cited by TASS, said the alliance knows that increasing
military activity by showing force "will lead to serious risks of military
incidents." He blasted NATO for creating a "serious change for the
worse in the regional and all-European dimension."
NATO announced it
will create a rapid response force composed of 5,000 to 7,000 personnel that
can be deployed in response to any crises within several days. "NATO is
heating up tensions in those regions where there has been no objective need in
overarmament. The Baltic region has been always the calmest one," he said.
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