Dozens Of WikiLeaks Cables Show US Knew NATO Expansion Was Russia’s Bright Red Line
'Nyet Means Nyet: Russia' s #NATO Enlargement Redlines' – Cable from 2008 written by CIA director William J. Burns, then US ambassador to Moscowhttps://t.co/rOoxmuf7CN pic.twitter.com/CeP2DwBpVD
— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) February 12, 2022
- Dozens Of WikiLeaks Cables Show US Knew NATO Expansion Was Russia’s Bright Red Line
by American Committee for US-Russia Accord, via https://www.zerohedge.com/
Nearly a year in, the war in Ukraine has cost hundreds of thousands of lives and brought the world to the brink of, in President Joe Biden’s own words, “Armageddon.” Alongside the literal battlefield has been a similarly bitter intellectual battle over the war’s causes.
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Commentators have rushed to declare the long-criticized policy of NATO expansion as irrelevant to the war’s outbreak, or as a mere fig leaf used by Russian President Vladimir Putin to mask what Condoleezza Rice and Robert Gates recently called “his messianic mission” to “reestablish the Russian Empire.” Fiona Hill, a presidential advisor to two Republican administrations, has deemed these views merely the product of a “Russian information war and psychological operation,” resulting in “masses of the US public … blaming NATO, or blaming the US for this outcome.”
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Yet a review of the public record and many dozens of diplomatic cables made publicly available via WikiLeaks shows that US officials were aware, or were directly told over the span of years, that expanding NATO was viewed by Russian officials well beyond Putin as a major threat and provocation, that expanding it to Ukraine was a particularly bright red line for Moscow, that it would inflame and empower hawkish, nationalist parts of the Russian political spectrum, and that it could ultimately lead to war.
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