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Euro-Atlantic community gearing for war – Lavrov
Euro-Atlantic community gearing for war – Lavrov
13 April 2025, 08:15
The militarization effort is being driven by Germany, France and the UK, Russia’s top diplomat has said
Euro-Atlantic international organizations have failed to deliver stability and security to the region, and now their members are preparing for a major new war, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said.
The top diplomat delivered the remarks on Saturday during a Q&A session at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Türkiye. Lavrov criticized what he described as “Euro-Atlantic structures,” including the EU and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), stating that the groups have ultimately failed to deliver on their proclaimed goals.
“The security issues after the Second World War in our common region were defined in terms of Euro-Atlantic logic. NATO and the EU were essentially European,” Lavrov said.
“The EU recently signed an agreement with NATO. The EU is now part of Euro-Atlantic policy – there is no doubt about that – including making its territory available for the alliance’s plans to move to the East, to the South, I don’t know where else,” he added, apparently referring to the Joint Declaration on EU-NATO Cooperation inked in early 2023.
I believe all these Euro-Atlantic structures have failed. They have failed to strengthen security and stability.
The Euro-Atlantic structures have ultimately succeeded in precisely the opposite, stoking international tensions and “remilitarizing Europe,” Lavrov suggested. “All the efforts of this Euro-Atlantic community are focused on preparing for a new war. Germany, together with France and Great Britain, is leading this process,” he added.
Lavrov’s remarks come after a meeting of the so-called “coalition of the willing,” a group of Kiev’s backers predominantly consisting of NATO and EU nations, was held earlier this week.
The defense chiefs from the member states discussed the potential deployment of a “peacekeeping” force to Ukraine, with the idea spearheaded by the UK and France.
The latest gathering failed to yield any tangible result, with EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas admitting that “different member states have different opinions and the discussions are still ongoing.”
While UK Secretary of Defense John Healey insisted that the groups were “well developed,” many of his counterparts publicly questioned the idea, raising concerns about the goals, mission and mandate of the potential deployment.
Moscow has repeatedly warned the West against deploying troops to Ukraine under any pretext, specifically objecting to forces from any NATO countries ending up in the country.
Last month, former Russian President and deputy head of Russia’s Security Council Dmitry Medvedev said that the potential emergence of any NATO “peacekeepers” in Ukraine would lead to a war between the bloc and Russia.
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