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NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg reiterated on Sunday that NATO would not send troops to Ukraine should Russia invade.
“We are focusing on providing support,” he said. “There is a difference between being a NATO member and being a strong and highly valued partner [such] as Ukraine. There’s no doubt about that,” he said in an interview with BBC.
UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss told Sky News that her country will seek to tighten sanctions on Russian President Vladimir Putin so there is no place for his oligarchs to hide.
She said the short-term profits came at a real cost of longer term threats to democracy and freedom in the United Kingdom and other Western allies.
London and its City financial hub have come under renewed attention as a primary destination for politically sensitive Russian businessmen and their funds, earning the British capital the nickname “Londongrad.”
Last week, the United States warned that the UK’s acceptance of what it called Russian “dirty money” threatened the effectiveness of any sanctions regime Washington will seek to impose to deter and potentially punish Russia.
Washington has been coordinating with allies should Moscow follow through on its military buildup on Ukraine’s borders and invade and occupy parts of that country beyond Crimea and the eastern region known as the Donbass.
Truss, however, said it was “very unlikely” British troops would be involved should there be a fight for Ukraine.
“This is about making sure that the Ukrainian forces have all the support we can give them,” she said.
CNN has reported that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Russian leader Putin are set to speak this week. On Sunday, Johnson said the potential for Russian military action in Ukraine is “increasingly concerning.”
Russia’s security concerns are defensive, unlike NATO
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also reiterated his position that NATO cannot claim to be defensive with foreign interventions such as the ones that occurred in Afghanistan, Libya and the former Yugoslavia under its belt.
Lavrov told the program “Sunday Time” on Russia’s Channel One that the Kremlin intends to protect its interests, according to state-run news agency Tass.
“When the Cold War was going on and the Berlin Wall existed, it was clear what territory to defend,” he said.