Deputy foreign minister insists de-escalation is possible despite ‘fundamental differences’
The long awaited NATO-Russia council meeting, held in Brussels on Wednesday, exposed conflicting views in the approach to international security taken by Moscow and the US-led military bloc.
The get together marked the first session of the international body since 2019 and it followed crucial direct US-Russia talks earlier this week in Geneva.
Following the Brussels consultations, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko held a large press conference, providing Moscow’s take on what was discussed.
Fundamental differences
NATO-Russia negotiations involved a “frank, direct, deep and intense” conversation, Grushko said. At the same time, the meeting highlighted the “fundamental differences” between the US-led bloc and Moscow in their stance on key security issues, with effectively “no unifying positive agenda” in sight.
“NATO understands the principle of the indivisibility of security selectively. In the eyes of NATO, it exists only for the members of the alliance. NATO is not going to take into account the interests of others. We proceed from the premise that the indivisibility of security should be for everyone,” the diplomat said, stressing that Moscow won’t allow anyone to build “security against Russia without Russia.”
Moscow awaits concrete proposals from NATO
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Russia is expecting the US-led bloc to table counter-proposals in response to the security guarantees agreement drafted by Moscow back in December. So far, the West has been quite vague in its response to the draft, expressing readiness to talk while calling some of the proposals unacceptable.