NATO's Ukraine debate still haunted by Bucharest pledge
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[July 10, 2023]
By Andrew Gray
VILNIUS (Reuters) - As NATO nations try to agree on Ukraine’s push for
membership at a summit in Vilnius this week, an earlier gathering casts
a long shadow.
At a summit in Bucharest in April 2008, NATO declared that both Ukraine
and Georgia would join the U.S.-led defence alliance - but gave them no
plan for how to get there.
The declaration papered over cracks between the United States, which
wanted to admit both countries, and France and Germany, which feared
that would antagonise Russia.
While it may have been an artful diplomatic compromise, some analysts
see it as the worst of both worlds: It served notice to Moscow that two
countries it once ruled as part of the Soviet Union would join NATO -
but brought them no closer to the protection that comes with membership.
Now, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is pressing NATO to make clear how
and when Ukraine can join, after the war triggered by Russia’s invasion
is over.
Once again, there are divisions within NATO. And officials often cite
the Bucharest declaration as a reference point.
There is widespread agreement that NATO should move "beyond Bucharest",
and not just restate that Ukraine will join one day. But there are
substantial differences over how far to go.
This time, the United States and Germany have been the most reluctant to
support anything that could be seen as an invitation or a process
leading to membership automatically.
Meanwhile, Eastern European NATO members, all of which spent decades
under Moscow's control in the last century, are pushing for Kyiv to get
a clear road map, with some backing from France.
Although Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba announced on Monday
that a series of formal conditions for membership had been removed, the
Vilnius declaration will inevitably be another compromise.
Assertions that "Ukraine’s rightful place is in NATO" and that it will
join "when conditions allow" are among the phrases being discussed,
diplomats say, as officials try to find wording acceptable to all NATO’s
31 members. It may end up, as in Bucharest, being left to the leaders to
resolve.
The parallels with the 2008 summit, held in the colossal Parliament
Palace commissioned by Romanian communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu,
have struck many NATO-watchers.
Orysia Lutsevych, a Ukraine policy expert at the Chatham House think
tank, said Zelenskiy and his advisers were working to secure as
unambiguous an outcome as possible for Kyiv this time.
"The Bucharest summit left a lot of bad aftertaste and actually created
the strategic ambiguity ... the permanent NATO waiting room for Ukraine
and Georgia," she said.
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Top ranking official attendees of the
NATO summit pose for a family picture in Bucharest April 3, 2008.
REUTERS/Francois Lenoir/File Photo
PRESSURE FROM PUTIN
Much has changed since 2008, but one constant remains: Vladimir
Putin.
The Russian president personally lobbied leaders in Bucharest not to
bring Ukraine and Georgia into NATO.
This time, it is Zelenskiy who has the chance to make his case in
person. But Russia will still be a big factor in discussions.
Underlying it all is the question of whether NATO would be prepared
to come to Ukraine’s defence against Russia, starting a direct
conflict between nuclear-armed powers. So far, all Western military
backing for Kyiv has come from individual member states, not the
transatlantic alliance as a whole.
Eastern European countries say the best way to ensure Russia does
not attack Ukraine again is to bring it under the collective
security umbrella that goes with NATO membership soon after the war.
They say the Bucharest wording made little difference to Putin’s
long-term intentions.
But others argue that promising Ukraine NATO membership after the
war could encourage Putin to keep the conflict going.
They say the Bucharest declaration in fact prompted Putin to test
Western Ukrainian militarily in both Ukraine and Georgia.
Four months after the summit, shelling from Georgia's Russian-backed
breakaway South Ossetia region induced the pro-Western government in
Tbilisi to send in its army.
This in turn was promptly crushed by a Russian invasion force,
cementing Moscow's hold over a part of Georgia.
In 2014, Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine by force and backed
separatist uprisings in eastern Ukraine's Donbass region. And in
February last year, Moscow launched its all-out invasion of Ukraine.
Moscow says the Bucharest declaration showed that NATO posed a
threat to Russia.
But Ukraine says NATO made a promise and must now keep it.
“Whether 2008 was the right decision or not, we can leave that aside
and just say that it took on really symbolic importance going
forward,” said said Timothy Sayle, professor at the University of
Toronto and author of a book on NATO history.
“The diplomats need to remind their leaders that what NATO says or
what NATO writes in its communiques has lasting significance - and
can create unexpected obligations."
(Reporting by Andrew Gray; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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