NATO’s top military commander jetted into Ukraine for high-level talks on Wednesday as fighting rumbled on between government forces and Kremlin-backed rebels in the east.
US General Philip Breedlove was set to meet with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko as Kiev stirred further Russian ire by stating it hoped to join the Western security alliance.
Poroshenko this week mooted an eventual referendum on joining Nato and Ukraine’s new pro-Western government has included a desire for membership in its official programme.
Russia is strongly opposed to the expansion of Western institutions in what it considers its backyard.
On Tuesday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said Ukraine’s efforts to join Nato would “lead only to further complication of the situation”.
“This will not increase security for Ukraine, it will not improve the life of the Ukrainian people,” he told reporters.
The Ukrainian public has never been keen on Nato membership in the past. But there has been a dramatic shift in opinion since Russia annexed Crimea in March, with 51 per cent backing Nato membership in a recent poll.
Kiev argues that it needs to join Nato in order to stave off alleged aggression from Moscow, which it accuses of stirring the conflict in the east that has killed over 4,300 people since April.
Breedlove has drawn angry condemnation from the Kremlin over his repeated assertions that Russia is pouring weapons and troops across the border to support pro-Moscow insurgents controlling swathes of the east.