Kremlin Not Optimistic About Relations With NATO, EU
By RFE/RL
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has told a security conference in Moscow that an April 20 meeting of the NATO-Russia Council -- the first in more than two years -- “did not inspire optimism” about the Kremlin’s relations with NATO and the European Union.
Shoigu made the remarks on April 27 at the Fifth Moscow Conference on International Security, which was being hosted by Russia’s Defense Ministry.
Shoigu said it was “not our fault that Russia’s military cooperation with NATO and EU countries has been frozen.”
NATO unilaterally suspended practical cooperation with Russia on April 1, 2014, in response to Russia’s military intervention in Ukraine and its illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.
The NATO-Russia Council had been set up in 2002 for handling security issues and joint projects, including nuclear nonproliferation and cooperation against terrorism and international drug smuggling.
The April 20 meeting of the NATO-Russia Council was the first of its kind since April 2014.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was scheduled to meet on April 27 with Lamberto Zannier, the secretary-general of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
The two were expected to discuss the activities of the OSCE’s Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine, which monitors the cease-fire agreement that is part of the Minsk accords.
Zannier has suggested that he and Lavrov also could discuss Russia's relations with NATO and the EU.
Meanwhile, Iranian Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan was scheduled to meet with Shoigu on the sidelines of the security conference.
Reports said the two would discuss Tehran's possible purchase of warplanes and tanks from Russia.
With reporting by Interfax, TASS, and Fars
Nuland Encouraged By Signs Of Reform From Ukraine's New Government
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland said during a visit to Kyiv on April 27 that she was encouraged by signs of commitment to reforms by Ukraine’s new government.
Speaking at the end of her first official visit to Kyiv since the pro-European parliamentary speaker Volodymyr Hroysman was confirmed as prime minister in April, Nuland said she is returning to Washington “optimistic that reform is back on track in Ukraine."
She said she saw commitment from all political forces in Kyiv to continue and accelerate reforms.
The International Monetary Fund has said Kyiv must tackle corruption and enact economic reforms in order to receive a desperately needed $17.5 billion IMF bailout package.
The money is needed to kick-start Ukraine’s economy and weather an ongoing conflict with Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Nuland also said President Barack Obama is committed to fully implementing the Minsk accords and that there was unified commitment from U.S. allies to keep sanctions in place against Russia until Moscow meets its obligations under the Minsk accords.