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Polish call to scrap NATO-Russia deal 'extraordinarily dangerous': Moscow
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Nov 26, 2015


Russia's foreign ministry on Thursday slammed as "extraordinarily dangerous" Poland's call to annul a NATO act that prevents it from having permanent military bases on its soil.

"We consider these statements to be extraordinarily dangerous and exceptionally provocative," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

Poland's new right-wing Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski on Wednesday called for scrapping the 1997 act on NATO-Russia relations to let the alliance install the bases, saying the document causes "inequality" between new and old members of the alliance.

Zakharova said that Waszczykowski's statement was part of an attempt to rally Western public opinion ahead of next year's NATO summit in Warsaw and that the annulment of the deal could "bring down the existing European security system."

"We see here the desire to convey the irreversible course taken by the alliance on the military containment of our country," she said in a briefing.

The Polish foreign ministry insisted Thursday evening that Moscow had "clearly misunderstood" Waszczykowski.

"Of course he was not referring to the NATO-Russia Founding Act adopted in 1997, but to political declarations by NATO concerning the deployment of large military units in Central Europe."

The 1997 document stipulates that older NATO members "have no intention, no plan and no reason to deploy nuclear weapons on the territory of new members" like Poland, Hungary or the Baltic countries.

It adds that NATO "will carry out its collective defence and other missions by ensuring the necessary interoperability, integration, and capability for reinforcement rather than by additional permanent stationing of substantial combat forces."

Russia has long insisted this provision clearly rules out permanent bases and troop deployments.

Poland wants NATO-Russia deal scrapped: minister
Warsaw (AFP) Nov 25, 2015 - Poland wants a 1997 deal on NATO-Russia ties to be scrapped to let the alliance install permanent military bases in Polish soil, something that Moscow insists the agreement rules out.

Poland's new right-wing Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski insisted in an interview published Wednesday that the deal must go because it causes "inequality" between new and older NATO members.

The 1997 document stipulates that older NATO members "have no intention, no plan and no reason to deploy nuclear weapons on the territory of new members" like ex-communist Poland.

Russia has long insisted this provision also rules out permanent bases and troop deployments.

Asked whether he wants the 1997 agreement annulled, Waszczykowski told the liberal Gazeta Wyborcza daily: "Yes. This agreement was political in character, it was not legally binding, and was concluded in a different international context.

"We demand an equal level of security" between older and new NATO members, he added.

"NATO cannot have two levels of security, namely one for Western Europe with US troops, with military bases and defence installations and another for Poland, without these elements.

"Poland is Russia's neighbour and this is why we're speaking up."

In 1999, Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary became the first ex-communist states to join NATO as the western defence alliance expanded into Warsaw Pact territory controlled by Moscow during the Soviet era.

Subsequent waves of expansion saw 12 formerly communist states join NATO. Russia has long opposed the expansion in the area it still considers a backyard.

Waszczykowski is a key member of Poland's new eurosceptic Law and Justice (PiS) government. Led by former prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the PiS is also well known for its hardline stance on Russia.

He said Poland was prepared to take Russia to court if it fails to promptly return the wreckage of the jet that crashed in Smolensk, western Russia, in 2010 killing then-president Lech Kaczynski -- Jaroslaw's identical twin.

Waszczykowski however underscored Poland's strong economic ties with top EU trading partner Germany and vowed that "Warsaw won't do anything that could damage this relationship."

But he said there were "certain issues on which we differ", namely security issues.

"The Germans think this (scrapping the 1997 deal) will cause tension with Russia. We ask: whose comfort are you more concerned about? A state that is your NATO and EU ally or a non-member that is engaged in its third war: with Georgia, Ukraine and now, Syria," Waszczykowski said.


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