A More Effective
Russian Strategy Against Further Enlargement of NATO
Eric Zuesse, April 26, 2022
Russia’s first strategy against further enlargement of NATO was to demand, on 15 December 2021, to the U.S. Government;
and, two days later, to America’s main
anti-Russian military alliance, NATO; that NATO would never add any new
member-nations — especially not Ukraine. This demand was firmly rejected, on 7 January 2022, by both America and its
NATO arm. Worse yet for Russia: after Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24th,
hoping thereby to prevent at least that country joining NATO,
both Finland and Sweden were so scared that
they might be invaded next, that both countries expressed in early April 2022 a
desire to join the anti-Russian alliance, and were welcomed by
America and its NATO arm to apply to join. So, even if Russia wins its
war in Ukraine, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will have actually failed, because
NATO seems now more likely even than before to increase — exactly the opposite of
what Russia had been intending.
A more effective strategy by Russia might nonetheless still be possible.
If so, I think that it would be something like this: