Russia aims to boot former Soviet nations from NATO by relinquishing sovereign recognition: lawmaker
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russia-ai...161257692.html
Caitlin McFall
Wed, June 15, 2022 at 11:12 AM
A Russian lawmaker  on Wednesday said Moscow will look to repeal its recognition of the  independence of former Soviet nations like Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia  in an attempt to revoke their NATO protections.
State Duma deputy  Yevgeny Fedorov told a Latvian news outlet that reversing Russia’s  decision to recognize the Baltic States as sovereign would allegedly create legal grounds to force the alliance to divert to 1997 borders.
"The  NATO Charter contains clause six, according to which the disputed  territories cannot be included in the alliance. As soon as the  territories of the Baltic countries are recognized as disputed, this  will become the basis for the exclusion of the Baltic countries from  NATO," Fedorov said.
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Last  week Fedorov introduced legislation targeting Lithuanian sovereignty  and claimed it illegally left the Soviet Union more than three decades  ago.
Lithuania became the first republic to announce it would  restore its independence from the collapsing USSR in March 1990 after  being under Soviet control since 1940.
Moscow, under 
President Mikhail Gorbachev, acknowledged Lithuania's sovereignty by September 1991.
Fedorov  claimed that Lithuania was Russia’s first NATO target as it posed the  greatest threat to Moscow and claimed it was "NATO's gateway to the  Baltics."
But the Russian lawmaker also said that other former Soviet states could be next.
 "The  Commander-in-Chief determined that our ‘red lines’ run along the  borders of NATO in 1997. This means that we need, at a minimum, to push  NATO beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union," he said in  reference to an era before eastern European nations were invited to join  the alliance.
 

 Russian  President Vladimir Putin delivers an address to the participants of the  Bolshaya Peremena All-Russian contest for school students via a video  link at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence, outside Moscow, on June 1,  2022. MIKHAIL METZEL/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images
 
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Lithuania,  Latvia and Estonia, all of which share borders with Russia or Belarus –  which has been described as a Russian puppet state – joined the NATO  alliance in 2004.
The only nations to join between 1997 and 2004  were Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, and Russia has repeatedly  called for the disarmament of these nations – a move NATO has flatly  rejected.
"If countries do not pose a threat, then we will not  change anything with them - there will still be peace and friendship,"  the state deputy claimed.
Fedorov threatened that should Russia  decide to reverse its recognition of independent Baltic States then NATO  should boot them from the alliance or accept that a "Third World War  will begin."
NATO has not publicly commented on Russia’s potential move to repeal its recognition of Baltic States’ sovereignty.
But  in an address Wednesday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg  pledged to bolster security efforts within alliance and beyond.
"President  Putin's goals goes beyond Ukraine, and that's the reason why we need to  both provide support to Ukraine as we do, but also strengthen our  deterrence and defense not least in the eastern part of the Alliance,"  he told reporters.
Despite Russia’s unveiled threats to NATO  allies, experts told Fox News there was no chance Moscow would be able  to dictate NATO membership.
"First, NATO would not ‘boot’ any  nation out of the Alliance.  NATO is the result of a treaty, the  Washington Treaty, so the only way for a NATO member to leave the  Alliance is by their own choice," Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of  Defense for Europe and NATO, Michael Ryan, said. "Second, the United  States never recognized the incorporation of the Baltic States into the  Soviet Union.
"Just because a Russian Duma member suggests that  Russia does not recognize them as independent nations, all the members  of NATO do, so nothing changes," he added.
 Similarly, former  intelligence officer for Russian doctrine and strategy with the Defense  Intelligence Agency (DIA), Rebekah Koffler, told Fox News that this was  another example of "Putin using his propaganda machine to scare the  people of the Baltic States, to foment discord, and ratchet up the  tensions with the West."
 "NATO will absolutely not consider kicking out the Baltics," she added.