Kremlin says Ukraine’s full NATO membership to be ‘unacceptable’
The potential decision to grant Ukraine full NATO membership will be "unacceptable" for Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday.
In a tongue-in-cheek gesture amid its growing tensions with its western neighbours, the Russian Foreign Ministry has renamed its Department of European Cooperation as the Department of European Problems (DEP) – on its website.
In a tongue-in-cheek gesture amid its growing tensions with its western neighbours, the Russian Foreign Ministry has renamed its Department of European Cooperation as the Department of European Problems (DEP) – on its website.
The changes to the structural diagram on the ministry’s webpage were made earlier this week but only reported by Russian media on the weekend, as per RT.
However, notwithstanding the renaming, the department, which deals with matters of “international European organisations” such as the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe), the Council of Europe, the EU, and NATO, will do the same work as before.
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However, the department renaming has only been done on the Foreign Ministry’s Russian version and the department’s name remains the same on the English, French, and German versions.
Russia’s relations with most European countries and organisations have deteriorated since 2014 since the change of regime in Ukraine and its takeover of Crimea, and gotten only worse since the conflict began with Ukraine in February 2022, in which the EU has been supporting Kiev with weapons and funds.
While Russia had held that the OSCE is in “a crisis situation” due to the inability of its members to find common ground on the most basic issues, it had withdrawn from the Council of Europe last year, contending that the West had hijacked the transnational grouping to further its interests.
EU nations, due to their support of Ukraine, participation in sanctions and other actions against Russia and its citizens, are seen by Moscow as “unfriendly” countries and NATO as a hostile military bloc.
During his meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in July, Russian President Vladimir Putin described the state of relations between Moscow and the EU as being “at its lowest point”.
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