Poroshenko cancels NATO membership restriction
The non-aligned status, which Ukraine adopted in 2010, “is a strategic cardinal mistake”, he said.
Ukraine's parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, last week voted to give up Ukraine’s non-aligned status. The bill submitted by Petro Poroshenko envisioned giving up the status of a non-aligned state and returning to the policy of rapprochement with NATO.
In late November, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said the membership may be sought by countries that fulfil the criteria for becoming NATO allies, and that is also valid for Ukraine. Ukraine cannot join NATO as long as an armed conflict continues in the east of the country.
Kiev started building ties with NATO shortly after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Ukraine was one of the first former Soviet states which joined NATO’s Partnership for Peace Program in 1994.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the idea of Ukraine’s bid for NATO membership is dangerous not only for the Ukrainian people, but also for entire European security.
The politicians, including first Ukrainian president Leonid Kravchuk, gathered in an initiative group to create a movement for Ukraine’s likely accession to NATO. Organisers said at a news conference they hoped that this step would allow Ukraine to hold a referendum on entry in the North Atlantic Alliance already in 2015.
The initiative group urged the Ukrainian authorities “to resume immediately Euro-Atlantic foreign political course, apply for accession to NATO and promote holding an all-Ukraine referendum on support for Ukraine’s membership in NATO.”
Ukraine does not have another way out, except for the entry to NATO, Leonid Kravchuk said. “If we want to survive, we should become a NATO member state, but we should start with a referendum,” he said with confidence.
Meanwhile, Ukraine may have some problems on the path to NATO, former Prime Minister and former Defense Minister Yevgeny Marchuk said. “The procedure to join NATO is quite complicated, it is difficult in technological terms and its requirements,” he noted, admitting that “it won't easy, because not all NATO states have such positions as we would like them to have.” “Ukraine can acquire a Membership Action Plan status only after a referendum,” he said.
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