File: 9506-3
EUROPEAN STABILITY AND NATO ENLARGEMENT: UKRAINE'S PERSPECTIVE
Hennadiy Udovenko, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine
Among the dramatic changes which have recently
occurred in Europe is the emergence of an independent
Ukraine with its population of 52 million. Ukraine
supports NATO's efforts to bring the Allies and the
nations of Central and Eastern Europe closer together,
and understands the aspirations of countries in this
region to become members of the Alliance although it
has no immediate plans to do so itself. Ukraine
believes, however, that any NATO enlargement must be
part of an evolutionary process and that during the
period of transition special attention must be paid to
the implementation of the Partnership for Peace
programme.
In recent years, Europe has seen a flow of radical
political, ideological and psychological changes that
have made our continent dramatically different from the
Europe we lived in only five years ago.
The end of global confrontation, the collapse of the
former Communist bloc and the subsequent disintegration
of the Soviet Union brought about new dimensions to the
situation in Europe, including to the sphere of
security. The Cold War ended and the threat of global
conflict vanished, adding to our general feeling of a
more secure world. On the other hand, new risks and
challenges, sometimes unforeseen, emerged on the scene.
To name only a few of the new dangers that represent a
big challenge to overall European stability one could
mention the security imbalance between the Western and
Eastern parts of the continent, numerous ethnic and
other local conflicts, open and hidden territorial
claims and border disputes.
In speaking about the dramatic changes in Europe, it
would not be an exaggeration to claim that the appearance
of an independent Ukrainian state with a population of 52
million proved to be one of the biggest geopolitical
developments since Yalta and Potsdam. Therefore, the
gradual and organic integration of Ukraine into the
European and world communities as a natural and
reliable democratic partner, is one of the top
priorities of our foreign policy. That is why we
attach such great importance to the issue of building
up a comprehensive all-European security system with
Ukraine becoming part and parcel of such a system.
The complexities of the transformations taking place in
the Euro-Atlantic area stem from the development of
national interests and priorities in the countries of
Central and Eastern Europe and the newly independent
states of the former Soviet Union and the need for
these to be balanced with the interests of the Western
democracies. They also result from the different
approaches by some countries and groups of countries
towards the role and functions of the European security
structures and institutions, and these approaches are
shaped, among other things, by the emergence of the new
risks and challenges to which I have already referred.
The specific feature of today's international situation
in Central and Eastern Europe is the absence of any
structural mechanisms for maintaining security and
stability in the region.
The existing European security structures, the North
Atlantic Alliance in particular, were originally created
to protect the interests of the so-called Western
community and its system of values.
These structures contributed to preserving stability in
at least a part of Europe by both defending the area
under their protection and smoothing out the
differences between the member countries. The
Euro-Atlantic structure is therefore perceived by
public opinion in the countries of Central and Eastern
Europe as the only efficient means of securing
protection from an outside threat, as well as providing
the political stability needed for the further
development of democracy and the free market economy.
The NATO enlargement debate
The concerns of the new democracies in our part of the
world caused by the existence of a so-called "security
vacuum" or "grey area" on the one side, and emerging
new power centres on the other, led to their search for
reliable security assurances which, consequently, has
resulted in the "NATO enlargement" issue being placed
on the agenda of numerous international fora and
bilateral discussions. Hardly any consideration of
European security today can escape touching upon this
issue, so it is not surprising that a substantial part
of the discussion on the future of European security at
the spring 1995 ministerial session of the North
Atlantic Cooperation Council (NACC) in Noordwijk, the
Netherlands, was devoted to the NATO enlargement
question.
Ukraine shares the view that NATO has a substantial role
in ensuring peace, stability, democracy and the
prosperity of Western Europe and the wider transatlantic
area. We are far from regarding the Alliance as a relic
of the Cold War, and this attitude stems from our
recognition that NATO has embarked on an active post-Cold
War search for a means of addressing the new realities
and challenges and is engaged in a process of
transformation.
As a vivid example of this transformation, we supported
the NATO initiatives for bringing closer the Allies and
countries of Central and Eastern Europe as well as
other countries of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), especially through the
NACC machinery and the Partnership for Peace (PfP)
programme. Our commitment to this new partnership is
derived not only from our interest in developing a
closer relationship with NATO, but also from a desire
to contribute to strengthening mutual trust and
understanding between European nations.
In this context, we welcome the prospects of closer
cooperative relations between the Alliance and Russia as
well as the latter's active participation in PfP.
We also consider that the open interest of the new
democracies of Central and Eastern Europe in becoming
members of the Alliance should influence NATO to
thoroughly reconsider its role in modern Europe and to
develop itself by an evolutionary process from a
collective defence organization into a collective
security institution, thus becoming a possible nucleus
for a future all-European security system that would
encompass other mutually complementary, interlocking
institutions. For its part, Ukraine, regarding itself
as an integral part of the Central and Eastern European
region, and taking into account its unique geopolitical
situation and its declared non-bloc status, sees itself
very much as a participant in the European security
debate and as a full-scale organic part of the new
European security architecture. It should be stressed
in this respect that Ukraine's decision to become part
of an all-European security system is legislatively
determined as a basic element of our national security,
as reflected in such documents as the Military Doctrine
and Basic Principles of External Policy of Ukraine
which has been adopted by the Parliament.
In thinking about the future, and as a country situated
in the heart of Europe, Ukraine is aware that any rise in
new security "dividing lines" on the Continent could pose
the greatest danger to both European and international
stability. This awareness leads us to keep a close eye
on the issue of a possible NATO expansion and its
would-be consequences.
Ukraine understands the aspiration of Central and Eastern
European states to become members of NATO and to
contribute to the Alliance's review of its role in
contemporary Europe. In this context, we share the view
that nobody has the right to veto any country's inherent
right to seek the most effective means of ensuring its
national security, including membership of military and
political organizations such as NATO. Ukraine, in
principle, had never put forward objections to the idea
of possible NATO enlargement.
On the other hand, the unquestionable "no vetoes"
principle vis-a-vis enlargement must not be
interpreted as implying that enlargement should be
implemented without due regard for the security
concerns of other interested countries (including
non-applicants for membership) whose stability and
security may, in one way or another, be affected by
this process. This is our clear understanding of the
"indivisibility of security" principle, which is and
should remain a consensual standard for uniting Europe.
European security system
The current situation in Europe is characterized by the
parallel existence of NATO and the Tashkent Treaty on
collective security to which several member states of
the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) are party.
But the prospects for establishing modalities for
co-existence, probable cooperation and the
complementarity of these two structures are not clear
and are hard to predict.
The results of the OSCE Budapest Summit in 1994, and the
subsequent developments, showed that there is no
consensus among the OSCE member states concerning the
ways and mechanisms of settling the conflict in the
former Yugoslavia, nor on the approaches for the creation
of a comprehensive European security system. We have
even
heard such phrases as "cold peace" which have been used
for the first time since the Berlin Wall collapsed.
Under these circumstances, an instant and artificially
accelerated NATO enlargement is likely to trigger among
a substantial segment of the population and public
opinion of the states of the former USSR, thinking
analogous to the mentality of the Cold War period.
Most of all, Ukraine would like to avoid these fears
becoming transformed into reality and finding itself -
even hypothetically - in a position of "a buffer zone"
or a "cordon sanitaire" between the two military
groupings.
Ukraine, as is set out in its main legislative documents,
still adheres to the policy of non-participation in
military alliances and has not put the issue of NATO
membership on the agenda for the time being. This aspect
is important when Ukraine pursues its national security
objectives by, inter alia, developing cooperation both
with Western Europe and Russia and other CIS states. The
re-emergence under new circumstances of bloc-to-bloc
alienation threatens to force Ukraine to seek security by
choosing sides across new lines of division. Such a
dramatic change in the regional situation would
definitely be a most unhappy development for the cause of
building a stable and united Europe.
Against this background, Ukraine firmly believes that any
possible NATO enlargement should not be seen as
revolutionary, speedy and momentous, but rather as an
evolutionary process. A certain time-frame is needed to
allow for the development of a vision by all the European
states of the Alliance's new role and place, and for
working out adequate mechanisms for an inclusive,
cooperative relationship of all the interested parties.
All of them should agree on the specific role of NATO
within the future European security system in consistent
interaction with other structures. NACC may be of
considerable value in this respect as a framework for a
thorough consideration of this issue.
We are also deeply convinced that during this period of
transition special and active attention should be given
to the implementation of the Partnership for Peace
programme and to the effective use of the opportunities
which it offers to all the interested states for
developing practical cooperation with NATO. PfP should
not be overshadowed by current security discussions,
including those on the issue of enlargement.
The enlargement issue is undoubtedly not an easy one and
simply adding new members is not the answer. No less
important is the question of how to incorporate the
changing NATO into a broader framework of the emerging
European security system, ensuring that this process is
smooth and natural. The need for an 'indivisible
framework' for European security calls for the Alliance
itself to begin a profound reconsideration of its role in
modern Europe and to widen the scope of its evolutionary
transformation into a collective security institution
interlocking with other international security
structures.
The essential component of this formula should be the
institutionalization of the network of relations and
cooperation with non-applicants - both within the
multilateral framework of PfP and, where
necessary, a bilateral framework. Ukraine is ready to
be actively involved in shaping such a network and to
deepen its relations with NATO.
Viewing the prospects for a Ukraine-NATO dialogue, we
should concentrate on finding ways and modalities of
working out a closer formal structure in the context of
"special relations" which stretch beyond the framework of
PfP. Ukraine is definitely interested in a relationship
with the Alliance which will embrace both regular
political and close military ties and allow for the
specifics of NATO-Ukraine security consultations to be
conducted on a regular basis, as well as for direct
participation in some of NATO's bodies, whose spheres of
activity are of particular interest to Ukraine. This
must be understood as creating the sort of environment
which includes both '16+1' and wider multilateral
formulae, keeps future options open, is connected to the
general development of a new European security
architecture, and is not considered by any country as
infringing upon its security interests.
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