Russia accuses US of trying to draw Finland, Sweden into NATO
Russia on Friday accused Washington of trying to lure Finland and Sweden into NATO.
The admission of the two Scandinavian countries would have serious security consequences for Russia that would demand reciprocal steps, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at a weekly press briefing in Moscow.
Singling out the US, among other countries in efforts at “drawing Finland and Sweden into the alliance,” Zakharova said the intensity of Helsinki and Stockholm’s interaction with NATO was not new.
All member states of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), including Finland and Sweden, have confirmed the principle that the security of some states cannot be built at the expense of the security of other countries, she added.
“It is obvious that the admission of Finland and Sweden to NATO, which is primarily … a military bloc, would have serious military and political consequences that would require retaliatory steps by our country,” she said.
The spokeswoman noted that the Finnish government had been pursuing a policy of neutrality and called it “an important factor of ensuring security and stability in the north of Europe and on the continent as a whole.”
She also once again stressed that Russia needed legally-binding guarantees from the US and NATO, proving that Russia would not face security risks.
This came on the second day of Moscow’s military intervention in Ukraine, with the latest reports indicating that Russian troops were heading toward the capital Kyiv from several directions.