Ukraine seeks roadmap to NATO membership

World Monday 10/July/2017 16:54 PM
By: Times News Service
Ukraine seeks roadmap to NATO membership

Kiev: Ukraine and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation will begin discussions on a roadmap to get Ukraine into NATO, with Kiev pledging reforms to it up to standard by 2020, President Petro Poroshenko said on Monday.
Speaking alongside Poroshenko on a visit to the Ukrainian capital, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said NATO has provided Ukraine with new equipment to uncover the perpetrators of a cyber attack that hit Ukraine in June and spread globally.
"Ukraine has clearly defined its political future and future in the sphere of security," Poroshenko told reporters.
"Today we clearly stated that we would begin a discussion about a membership action plan and our proposals for such a discussion were accepted with pleasure."
At loggerheads with Russia and fighting a Kremlin-backed insurgency in eastern Ukraine, Ukraine passed a law in June prioritising NATO membership as a foreign policy goal.
NATO leaders agreed at a summit in 2008 that Ukraine would one day become a member of the alliance and the country already contributes troops to NATO missions including in Afghanistan.
A formal NATO membership plan for Ukraine would mean meeting targets on political, economic and defence reforms, with national plans submitted annually to show progress.
But there are even larger barriers. NATO rules state that aspiring members must "settle their international disputes by peaceful means", meaning Ukraine would need to resolve the Donbass conflict -- an insurency by pro-Russian forces -- that has so far killed more than 10,000 people.
The meeting between Poroshenko and Stoltenberg comes a day after U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited Kiev and said Russia must make the first move in staunching the violence in eastern Ukraine.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin said on Monday that Ukraine's potential membership of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) would not boost stability and security in Europe.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also commented on a statement from NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg who said Russia had to withdraw thousands of its troops from Ukraine.
Peskov said Russia did not have any troops in Ukraine.