Slovak PM vows not to support Ukraine joining NATO
Robert Fico pledged to support Ukraine’s move to join the European Union upon resolving the conflict
Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said his country would not support Ukraine’s accession to the North Atlantic Alliance, at least as long as he serves as the head of government.
The Slovak prime minister said this to the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S.Paulo in an interview while on an official visit to Brasilia.
Ukraine will lose 30% of its territory due to the conflict with Russia, but will never receive an invitation to NATO from the United States and its allies, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said.
“I think Ukraine will lose a third of its territory, but it will be offered security guarantees, such as the presence of foreign troops.
If this is considered the happiness for Ukraine that everyone talks about, I believe that Ukrainians will be betrayed,” he said in an interview with Brazil’s Folha de S.Paulo newspaper.
According to Fico, the solution to the Ukraine conflict lies in achieving a ceasefire and initiating negotiations.
“Ukraine <…> has allowed itself to be drawn into a situation that cannot end well for the country.
It will lose territory and will not be invited to join NATO,” he remarked. The prime minister also emphasized that the conflict’s repercussions would significantly impact Ukraine’s internal stability.
However, Fico pledged to support Ukraine’s move to join the European Union upon resolving the conflict.
Meanwhile At a meeting with the Foreign Ministry on June 14, Russian President Vladimir Putin set out the country’s conditions for settling the situation in Ukraine. Among them are the withdrawal of the Ukrainian armed forces from Donbass and Novorossiya and Kiev’s refusal to join NATO.
In addition, Russia wants all Western sanctions against it lifted and demands that Ukraine commit to a non-aligned and nuclear-free status.
The rights, freedoms and interests of its Russian-speaking population need to be ensured, too.
On December 8, Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov reiterated that Moscow was open to talks on Ukraine, while in order to get on the peace track, it would be enough for Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky to cancel his decree banning any talks with Russia and give instructions to resume dialogue based on the Istanbul agreements, while taking into account the actual situation on the ground.