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Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has accused the
West of breaking promises made after the fall of the Iron Curtain,
saying that NATO's expansion into Eastern Europe violated commitments
made during the negotiations over German reunification. Newly
discovered documents from Western archives support the Russian position.
No one in Russia can vent his anger over NATO's eastward expansion
quite as vehemently as Viktor Baranez. The popular columnist with the
tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda ("Komsomol Truth"), which has a
readership of millions, is fond of railing against the "insidious and
reckless" Western military alliance. Russia, Baranez writes, must
finally stop treating NATO as a partner.
Baranez, a retired colonel who was the Defense Ministry's spokesman
under former Russian President Boris Yeltsin, asks why Russia should
even consider joint maneuvers after being deceived by the West. NATO,
he writes, "has pushed its way right up to our national borders with
its guns." He also argues that, in doing so, NATO has broken all the
promises it made during the process of German reunification.
There is widespread agreement among all political parties in Moscow,
from the Patriots of Russia to the Communists to Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin's United Russia party, that the West broke its word and
short-changed Russia when it was weak.
In an interview with Spiegel
at his residence outside Moscow in early November, President Dmitry
Medvedev complained that when the Berlin Wall came down, it had "not
been possible to redefine Russia's place in Europe." What did Russia
get? "None of the things that we were assured, namely that NATO would
not expand endlessly eastwards and our interests would be continuously
taken into consideration," said Medvedev.
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