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NATO Members Express Solidarity Ahead of Russia Talks

INTERNATIONAL: The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, also called the North Atlantic Alliance (NATO) foreign ministers have said on Friday they remained united against any possible Russian military action in Ukraine and signalled that many security demands made by the Kremlin were unacceptable.

The 30 ministers held a video call ahead of U.S.-Russia negotiations in Geneva on Monday, which will be followed by a NATO-Russia meeting in Brussels and broader talks in Vienna, prompted by Moscow's demand for security guarantees.

Russia has deployed large numbers of troops near its border with Ukraine and wants legally binding guarantees that NATO will halt its eastward expansion and end military cooperation with the former Soviet republics of Ukraine and Georgia.

Moscow denies U.S. suggestions that it is planning to invade Ukraine and instead accuses Kyiv of building up its forces in the east of the country.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, who chaired the call with the foreign ministers, welcomed the prospect of talks with Moscow next week after months of both sides accusing the other of jeopardising peace and stability in Europe.

But speaking at a news conference at NATO's headquarters in Brussels, Stoltenberg has added: "The idea that Ukraine is a threat to Russia is to put the whole thing upside down."

There is no prospect of either Ukraine and Georgia - which both have territorial disputes with Moscow - joining NATO any time soon. But Stoltenberg said the admission of North Macedonia and Montenegro showed that the door remained open.

Stoltenberg further says that it would be unacceptable to grant Russia a veto over which countries could join the U.S.-led alliance in the future.

NATO wants Moscow to re-engage with a peace process in eastern Ukraine, where some 15,000 people have been killed in a seven-year conflict between Ukrainian government troops and Russian-backed separatists.

PHOTO: NEWS CONFERENCE WITH NATO SECRETARY GENERAL JENS STOLTENBERG


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