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  • Emmanuel Macron
    Emmanuel Macron “If the Russians were to break through the front lines, if there were a Ukrainian request [of sending ground troops to Ukraine], which is not the case today, we would legitimately have to ask ourselves this question.” 2 hours ago
  • David Cameron
    David Cameron “We will give three billion pounds every year for as long as is necessary. We've just really emptied all we can in terms of giving equipment. The aid package was the largest from the UK so far. Some of that (equipment) is actually arriving in Ukraine today, while I'm here. Ukraine has a right to use the weapons provided by London to strike targets inside Russia, and that it was up to Kyiv whether to do so. Ukraine has that right. Just as Russia is striking inside Ukraine, you can quite understand why Ukraine feels the need to make sure it's defending itself.” 2 hours ago
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NATO - Russia relations

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to the Context NATO - Russia relations.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“Ukraine's accession to NATO could lead to a situation where Ukrainian authorities launch a military action to reclaim control over Crimea or areas controlled by Russia-backed separatists in the country's east. Imagine that Ukraine becomes a NATO member and launches those military operations. Should we fight NATO then? Has anyone thought about it?”

author
President of Russia
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“From the NATO side we are ready to engage in political dialogue. But we're also ready to respond if Russia chooses an armed conflict confrontation.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“For us, the matter of priority is achievement of watertight, bulletproof, legally binding guarantees that Ukraine and other ex-Soviet republics will not join NATO.”

author
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
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“The alliance [NATO] should make clear that its long phase of expansion is over. Ending the open-door policy, tricky as it would be to execute, and rethinking the security architecture of central and eastern Europe would not be a concession to Putin. To the contrary, it is necessary in order for the most successful alliance of the twentieth century to endure and prosper in the twenty-first.”

author
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“Russia has been waging an advanced form of hybrid warfare in Ukraine and Moscow has also been launching disinformation campaigns across Europe. The strength of NATO should be measured by how successfully it can counter Russia in the grey zone. Hybrid warfare deterrence is not an easy task but NATO should deploy its Counter Hybrid Support Teams in Eastern Europe.”

author
Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, working on Russia and cybersecurity
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“It seems that the risk of war in the OSCE area is now greater than ever before in the last 30 years. For several weeks, we have been faced with the prospect of a major military escalation in Eastern Europe. We should focus on a peaceful resolution of the conflict in and around Ukraine.”

author
Polish minister for foreign affairs
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“If Russia walks away... it will be quite apparent they were never serious about pursuing diplomacy and that is why collectively we are preparing for every eventuality. The heavy pace of bilateral and multilateral engagements this week demonstrates that the United States and our allies and partners are not dragging our feet. It is Russia that has to make a stark choice: de-escalation and diplomacy or confrontation and consequences.”

author
US Deputy Secretary of State
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“There are significant differences between NATO allies and Russia on this issue. Our differences will not be easy to bridge, but it is a positive sign that all NATO allies and Russia sat down around the same table and engaged on substantive topics. The allies had agreed to hold a series of meetings with Moscow on a variety of strategic issues. Russia was not in a position to agree on that proposal. They didn't reject it either, but the Russian representatives made it clear that they needed some time to come back to NATO with an answer.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“It is a timely opportunity for dialogue at a critical moment for European security. When tensions are high, it is even more important that we sit down around the same table and address our concerns.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“In our prior consultations and meetings with allies … it has become crystal clear that not a single ally inside the Nato alliance is willing to budge or negotiate anything as it relates to Nato's open-door policy. I cannot imagine any scenario where that is up for discussion... I think we're operating in today's world with Nato as it stands today, and I don't think anyone inside the Nato alliance is interested in going back in time to revisit an era where Nato looked a lot different than it does today.”

author
US ambassador to Nato
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“We will be holding a major round of [security] talks with the United States that will take place immediately after the end of the New Year holidays. NATO is now a purely geopolitical project to develop territory that has become ownerless after the disappearance of the Warsaw Pact and after the collapse of the Soviet Union. This is what they are doing.”

author
Russian Foreign Minister
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“You should give us guarantees. You! And without any delay! Now! Is it us who placed missiles next to the U.S. borders? No. It is the U.S. with its missiles who came to our home and are on the threshold of our home….Is it an unusual demand? Do not place any more assault systems next to our home? What is unusual about it?”

author
President of Russia
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“We remain ready for meaningful dialogue with Russia and I intend to call a new meeting of the NATO-Russia Council as soon as possible in the new year.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“Why did they expand NATO and renounce the missile defence treaties? They are to blame for what is happening now, for the tensions building up in Europe. Armed conflicts and bloodshed are absolutely not something we would choose, we do not want such a scenario. We are extremely concerned that elements of the US global missile defence system are being deployed next to Russia.”

author
President of Russia
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“If our concerns are disregarded and NATO countries are not ready to show military restraint, we will have to use the response instruments at our disposal. There is no other option. If the other side decides to project, let alone use force, that is, if it applies its defence capability as a means of economic or political pressure, this will be unacceptable to Russia, and we will find methods to neutralise these threats. For example, if strike systems capable of reaching our command centres within a matter of minutes are deployed in the territory of NATO countries, we will have to create an appropriate situation for them.”

author
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
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“There's very little enthusiasm within NATO for bringing in Ukraine. There is, however, a consensus on the need to support [Ukraine] politically, economically, and, to the extent they can, in security terms. Russia may seek certain commitments over Ukraine, and we're probably not willing to provide those. But above all, Russia wants to feel as if it has a seat at the table and is taken seriously as a great power, which its nuclear status certainly gives it. There has been a tendency not to take Russia very seriously over the past decades, rightly or wrongly.”

author
President of the German Marshall Fund of the United States
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