Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Putin refuses to waver on east Ukraine; Finland endorses NATO bid

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LVIV, Ukraine — As Finland’s leaders dealt him a blow by announcing their support for joining NATO, Russian President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed his determinat­ion to maintain Moscow’s sway over eastern Ukraine as Russian missiles pounded the area.

Putin, in a message released by the Kremlin on Thursday, offered his support to Leonid Pasechnik, the head of pro-russia separatist­s in the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic, part of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region.

“I am sure that through our joint efforts we will defend the independen­ce, sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity” of the Luhansk republic, Putin said, as his war on Ukraine began its 12th week.

The Russian leader’s message was backed by a torrent of Russian airstrikes and artillery barrages along the 300-mile-long eastern battlefron­t, including on a steel mill where the last pocket of Ukrainian military resistance remains in the strategic southeaste­rn port city of Mariupol.

The fighting came amid the dramatic announceme­nt by Finland’s president and prime minister of their support for joining NATO, paving the way for an expansion of the U.s.-led military alliance that Putin partially blamed for his decision to invade Ukraine.

Finland, a historical­ly neutral country that shares an 830-mile land border with Russia, is expected to be joined soon by Sweden in seeking membership in the 30-member security pact.

“NATO membership would strengthen Finland’s security,” President Sauli Niinisto and Prime Minister Sanna Marin said in a joint statement Thursday. “As a member of NATO, Finland would strengthen the entire defense alliance. Finland must apply for NATO membership without delay.”

Kremlin officials warned that they saw Finland’s move to join NATO as a threat.

“Another expansion of NATO does not make our continent more stable and secure,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, according to the Interfax news agency.

The addition of the two Nordic states to

NATO would underscore how badly Putin has miscalcula­ted the world’s response to his invasion of Ukraine, which has failed to achieve its initial military objectives, prompted Europe to begin weaning itself off Russia’s most valuable export — fossil fuels — and compelled nonaligned states to pick sides.

“This is monumental,” said Aglaya Snetkov, a

Russia expert and lecturer in internatio­nal politics at University College London. “This reverses decades of foreign policy.

“Putin’s initial plan of drawing a line in the sand between Russia and NATO and reversing the latter’s expansion has spectacula­rly backfired,” she added. “This is precisely what Russia did not want: NATO expansion.”

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