The Citizen (KZN)

‘Ukraine can count on us’

EXPANDING NATO SQUARES UP TO RUSSIA

- Madrid

Putin accuses alliance of seeking to assert its ‘supremacy’.

The United States vowed to reinforce Europe’s defences in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as Nato declared Moscow the West’s greatest threat – prompting Vladimir Putin to lash out at the alliance’s “imperial ambitions”.

Meeting in Madrid on Wednesday, Nato leaders said Russia “is the most significan­t and direct threat to allies’ security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area”.

This came as Nato officially invited Sweden and Finland to join the alliance and US President Joe Biden announced new deployment­s of US troops, ships and planes. Biden said that the US move was exactly what Russian President Putin “didn’t want” – and Moscow, facing fierce resistance from Ukrainian forces equipped with Western arms, reacted with predictabl­e fury.

Putin accused the alliance of seeking to assert its “supremacy”, telling journalist­s in the Turkmenist­an capital of Ashgabat that Ukraine and its people are “a means” for Nato to “defend their own interests”.

“The Nato countries’ leaders wish to... assert their supremacy, their imperial ambitions,” the Russian president added.

Nato leaders have funnelled billions of dollars of arms to Ukraine and faced a renewed appeal from President Volodymyr Zelensky for more long-range artillery.

“Ukraine can count on us for as long as it takes,” Nato chief Jens Stoltenber­g said at the summit, which ended yesterday, announcing a new strategic overview that focuses on the Moscow threat.

The document, updated for the first time since 2010, warned that the alliance “cannot discount the possibilit­y” of an attack on its members.

“Today in Madrid, Nato proved it can take difficult but essential decisions. We welcome a cleareyed stance on Russia, as well as the accession for Finland and Sweden,” Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said.

But Putin dismissed Nato’s invites to Finland and Sweden, which abandoned decades of military nonalignme­nt in response to the invasion, as “no problem”.

Russian missiles continued to rain down across Ukraine. Zelensky said a missile strike on the southern city of Mykolaiv destroyed a five-storey building, killing at least five people.

The city of Lysychansk in the eastern Donbas region was also facing sustained bombardmen­t. –

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