Kyiv calls for NATO to secure Black Sea and integrate Ukrainian defenses
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April 13, 2023]
By Luiza Ilie and Jason Hovet
BUCHAREST -NATO should play a bigger role in security in the Black Sea,
and integrate Ukraine's air and missile defences with those of alliance
allies, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba said on Thursday.
"The Black Sea is instrumental for making the whole of Europe peaceful
and future-oriented," Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmitro Kuleba, speaking
via video link, told a Black Sea security conference in the Romanian
capital Bucharest.
"Sadly, it is also a showcase of how rapidly things can deteriorate if
one neglects threats. It's time to turn Black Sea into what the Baltic
Sea has become, a sea of NATO."
The remarks were brushed aside in Moscow, where Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov told a briefing: "The Black Sea can never be a NATO sea."
"This is a shared sea, it must be a sea of cooperation, interaction and
security for all its littoral states. And this security is indivisible."
The Black Sea and its Ukrainian coast have been crucial theatres of war
since Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year. Both Moscow and Kyiv rely
on the sea for trade including supplying grain markets as two of the
world's biggest food exporters. A Russian blockade threatened to cause a
global food crisis last year until the United Nations and Turkey
brokered an agreement to keep ports open, still the focus of diplomacy.
"We need to address the common Russia problem together. For instance, I
support the expert idea to integrate the air and missile defence systems
of Ukraine with the ones of the Black and Baltic Sea NATO allies," said
Kuleba.
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Banners displaying the NATO logo are
placed at the entrance of new NATO headquarters during the move to
the new building, in Brussels, Belgium April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Yves
Herman/File Photo
Russia's Black Sea fleet is based in Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula
Moscow seized and annexed in 2014, and capturing Ukraine's ports has
been a major Russian objective. Since last year's invasion, Moscow
has seized the entire coast of the Sea of Azov that opens into the
Black Sea, but its advance along the Black Sea coast was halted
about 130 km east of Ukraine's main port Odesa.
Kyiv has no comparable navy, but the impact of Russia's superiority
at sea has been blunted since Ukraine sank Russia's flagship cruiser
Moskva a year ago and recaptured Snake Island, a rocky outcrop near
sea lanes to Odesa.
In the north of Europe, the security map around the Baltic Sea has
been redrawn in the past year by Finland and Sweden's decision to
apply to join NATO, leaving Russia soon to be the only coastal
country outside the Western military alliance.
Applications by Ukraine and Georgia to join would have the same
impact on the Black Sea, where Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey are
already members.
Kuleba said an upcoming NATO summit in Vilnius was an opportunity to
move forward on Ukraine's long-sought NATO membership "to show that
the door is not only open but that there is a clear plan on when and
how Ukraine will enter it."
(Reporting by Luiza Ilie and Jason HovetAdditional reporting by
Reuters Moscow bureauEditing by Peter Graff)
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