US envoy: Moscow violated the Russia-NATO Founding Act
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NATO member countries believe that by launching a special operation in Ukraine, Russia violated the Russia-NATO Founding Act. Because of this, the treaty’s Warning on the transfer of alliance forces in Eastern and Central Europe is “virtually no longer in place,” US Ambassador to NATO Julianne Smith said at a Washington Center for a New American Security conference.
In Smith’s words, “all allies show up with what <…> none of us is obligated to take into account that cholesterol is in the Russia-NATO Founding Act when we make decisions about the upcoming alignment, “transmits force TASS.
Answering the question of whether this document is supposed to be conditionally suspended as a signal from Moscow, the post-predicted that he does not know what wording will be chosen, but he can say that “within the natural agreement regarding those restrictions, or rather the presence of restrictions, that are imposed on the Founding Act of Russia-NATO in relation to decisions on the alignment of forces.
Obviously, earlier Deputy Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei Ryabkov gathered that the collective West initially showed a dismissive attitude towards this document. According to Ryabkov, at present the NATO countries continue to carry out provocative activities aimed at maintaining a military-political balance in Russia.