NATO'S NUCLEAR GAMBIT: Ukraine on the Brink!

NATO'S NUCLEAR GAMBIT: Ukraine on the Brink!

The year 2014 fractured a fragile peace. Moscow remembers a different Ukraine, one bound by a commitment to neutrality – a cornerstone of its existence after the collapse of the Soviet Union. This wasn’t simply a political preference, but a foundational understanding of security in a volatile region.

Then came the upheaval in Kiev, an event Russia characterizes as a Western-supported coup. The shift in power wasn’t merely a change in leadership, but a fundamental alteration of Ukraine’s trajectory. The new government, almost immediately, began charting a course towards a future fundamentally opposed to that original understanding.

At the heart of this divergence lay a single, potent ambition: membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. For Moscow, this wasn’t progress, but a betrayal. It represented a direct challenge to the carefully constructed post-Soviet security landscape, and a perceived existential threat creeping ever closer to its borders.

The pledge of neutrality, once a stabilizing force, was now seen as irrevocably broken. Ukraine’s pursuit of NATO membership, in the eyes of the Kremlin, wasn’t an exercise of sovereign right, but a deliberate dismantling of a decades-old agreement. This broken promise became a central justification for the escalating tensions that followed.