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NATO, Montenegro to sign accession accord: Stoltenberg

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NATO will on Thursday sign an accession agreement with Montenegro, paving the way for the small Balkan country to become the transantlantic alliance's 29th member state, alliance head Jens Stoltenberg said.

Montenegro's membership is "a clear sign that NATO countries continue to build stability and security in the western Balkans," Stoltenberg told a press briefing Wednesday ahead of a two-day NATO foreign ministers meeting at alliance HQ in Brussels.

The move also shows that "NATO's door remains open," he added, as the alliance prepares for a set-piece summit in Warsaw in July which will sign off on a major NATO military revamp agreed in response to the Ukraine crisis and Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Diplomatic sources say they expect it will take the 28 member states 18 months to ratify the Montenegro accession accord, which Russia has condemned as another case of NATO encroaching on its strategic interests.

While ties with Russia are badly strained by the Ukraine crisis, Stoltenberg rejected any suggestion that NATO membership for Montenegro was a hostile move, insisting that all countries have the right to decide their own future.

"The fundamental principle is that every nation has the right to decide its own path... including to decide what security arrangements it wants to be part of," he said.

"Therefore any sanctions or reactions from Russia would be absolutely unjustified," he added.

NATO formally invited Montenegro to join in December, sparking a warning from Moscow that it would have to respond to protect its security interests in the Balkans, home to several of its historic Slavic allies.

Among the other states of the former Yugoslavia, Croatia and Slovenia have both joined NATO, while many of the former communist states in eastern Europe once ruled from Moscow have also become members.

Russia sees this process, backed by a NATO military build-up in response to the Ukraine crisis, as a threat to its security.

NATO will on Thursday sign an accession agreement with Montenegro, paving the way for the small Balkan country to become the transantlantic alliance’s 29th member state, alliance head Jens Stoltenberg said.

Montenegro’s membership is “a clear sign that NATO countries continue to build stability and security in the western Balkans,” Stoltenberg told a press briefing Wednesday ahead of a two-day NATO foreign ministers meeting at alliance HQ in Brussels.

The move also shows that “NATO’s door remains open,” he added, as the alliance prepares for a set-piece summit in Warsaw in July which will sign off on a major NATO military revamp agreed in response to the Ukraine crisis and Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Diplomatic sources say they expect it will take the 28 member states 18 months to ratify the Montenegro accession accord, which Russia has condemned as another case of NATO encroaching on its strategic interests.

While ties with Russia are badly strained by the Ukraine crisis, Stoltenberg rejected any suggestion that NATO membership for Montenegro was a hostile move, insisting that all countries have the right to decide their own future.

“The fundamental principle is that every nation has the right to decide its own path… including to decide what security arrangements it wants to be part of,” he said.

“Therefore any sanctions or reactions from Russia would be absolutely unjustified,” he added.

NATO formally invited Montenegro to join in December, sparking a warning from Moscow that it would have to respond to protect its security interests in the Balkans, home to several of its historic Slavic allies.

Among the other states of the former Yugoslavia, Croatia and Slovenia have both joined NATO, while many of the former communist states in eastern Europe once ruled from Moscow have also become members.

Russia sees this process, backed by a NATO military build-up in response to the Ukraine crisis, as a threat to its security.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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