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Russia Questions NATO's Ability To Ensure Global Stability

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  • Russia Questions NATO's Ability To Ensure Global Stability

    RUSSIA QUESTIONS NATO'S ABILITY TO ENSURE GLOBAL STABILITY

    RIA Novosti
    15:43 | 22/ 07/ 2008

    NATO expansion will not lead to greater stability in the world,
    the head of a post-Soviet security bloc said on Tuesday.

    "We take a negative view of NATO enlargement. The problem is that new
    military infrastructure is being built around Collective Security
    Treaty Organization [CSTO] member states, primarily Russia and
    Belarus," Nikolai Bordyuzha, general secretary of the CSTO, told a
    news conference in the Armenian capital.

    The CSTO is a post-Soviet security alliance which also comprises
    Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan.

    "This also applies to forward bases in Bulgaria and Romania, attempts
    to deploy radar stations in the Baltic region, and infrastructure in
    Central Asia," he said.

    Bordyuzha said the expansion of NATO would not automatically bring
    about greater stability in the world.

    "I believe there are other ways of creating collective security
    systems, both in Europe and globally; these options should be used,"
    he said. He also added, without elaborating, that it was wrong "to
    impose NATO membership on certain states."

    He conceded, however, that any sovereign state had a right to join
    any international organization, as long as that "strengthens global
    stability."

    He stressed that all post-Soviet states needed stability to be able
    to continue their economic growth and implement social programs.

    "It is this kind of stability that we are working for, including
    through the CSTO," Bordyuzha said.

    Russia has been strengthening military ties with its allies amid
    growing tensions over NATO expansion and U.S. missile shield plans for
    Central Europe. An agreement was recently signed by Washington and
    Prague on deploying a U.S. radar in the Czech Republic, a move that
    did little to assuage Russian concerns for its national security. The
    missile deal has yet to be approved by the Czech parliament.
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