Sekėjai

Ieškoti šiame dienoraštyje

2026 m. sausio 21 d., trečiadienis

Russia Cheers as NATO Rift Grows --- Putin has long sought to undermine the Western alliance that he sees as a threat


“Russian President Vladimir Putin has sought to undermine NATO for nearly two decades. Now, as President Trump pushes to control Greenland, Moscow is cheering from the sidelines.

 

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov appealed to Trump's ego this week as the president pressed his pursuit of the Arctic island. "By resolving the issue of Greenland's annexation, Trump will undoubtedly go down in the history books. And not only in the history of the United States, but in world history," he said.

 

Trump has said the U.S. must acquire Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of Denmark, for national security. He has threatened to impose 10% tariffs on eight European nations that sent small groups of troops to the Arctic island in recent days. The spat is turning into a perilous moment for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which has served as the security foundation of the U.S.-led global order since World War II.

 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Tuesday that the alliance is in "deep crisis," adding that he hadn't imagined a scenario in which one member of the alliance would attack another.

 

Lavrov said Russia is merely monitoring the situation. He dismissed Trump's assertion that Russia would seize the island if the U.S. didn't, saying Moscow has no such plans. But he also appeared to give Moscow's blessing to Trump's desire to take the island, comparing Greenland with Russia's first land grab on Ukrainian territory -- the 2014 annexation of Crimea, Kyiv's peninsula on the Black Sea. "Crimea is no less important for the Russian Federation than Greenland is for the United States," he said.

 

The remarks spoke directly to the fears of some European leaders that Trump's move to take Greenland would degrade the norms of international law and potentially embolden Putin further in Ukraine and Eastern Europe, where smaller countries rely almost entirely on the collective might of the alliance.

 

"It's a five alarm emergency that's dividing North America from Europe," said John Foreman, a former U.K. defense attache in Moscow and Kyiv. "Russia must be sitting back thinking Christmas just keeps coming."

 

Russia's glee over NATO's troubles, he said, likely were tempered by the possibility Trump gains control of Greenland, expanding the U.S. footprint in the Arctic. Moscow has invested heavily in reopening Soviet-era military bases in the region and building the largest fleet of icebreakers in the world, hoping to outmaneuver alliance countries in the Far North.

 

But in the near term, the fight over Greenland is sowing instability in an alliance that Moscow has long seen as a threat.

 

NATO's eastward creep has long been one of Putin's chief grievances against the West. The Soviet Union's Cold War-era answer to NATO, the Warsaw Pact, fell apart as color revolutions and the fall of the Soviet Union opened the way for nations once aligned with Moscow to join the Atlantic bloc. Some of those countries, such as Estonia, Lithuania and Poland, are some of the alliance's staunchest members.

 

Sergei Markov, a Russian political analyst who has worked for the Kremlin, said the growing rift between Washington and Brussels could be the opening shot of a total realignment in Western security policy to the benefit of Russia.

 

In a post on Telegram, he speculated that tensions could boil over with the two sides exchanging fire and dissolving NATO. Ukraine, without its European backers, would fall into the hands of Russia.

 

"Russia will restore very good relations with Ukraine, good relations with half of the countries of Europe and normal relations with the United States," he said. "Greenland is the ideal solution." But many Western leaders see such a scenario as far fetched. They are working to convince Trump his pursuit of Greenland is unnecessary, head off a trade war and hold NATO together.

 

Russian presidential envoy Kirill Dmitriev also is expected to be in Davos. He celebrated the NATO tensions in a post on X. "Collapse of the transatlantic union. Finally -- something actually worth discussing in Davos."” [1]

 

1. World News: Russia Cheers as NATO Rift Grows --- Putin has long sought to undermine the Western alliance that he sees as a threat. Grove, Thomas.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 21 Jan 2026: A6.  

Komentarų nėra: