NATO invites Montenegro to join alliance as 29th member

NATO invites Montenegro to join alliance as 29th member

BRUSSELS - Agence France-Presse
NATO invites Montenegro to join alliance as 29th member

AP photo

NATO foreign ministers on Dec. 2 invited Montenegro to join the U.S.-led military alliance, a move Russia has repeatedly warned would be a provocation and a threat to stability in the western Balkans.

“NATO foreign ministers have just taken the historic decision to start accession talks for Montenegro to become the 29th member,” alliance head Jens Stoltenberg said.

“This is a good day for Montenegro, for the western Balkans and for the whole alliance,” Stoltenberg said to applause from the 28 NATO foreign ministers meeting in open session to approve the decision.

“It makes clear NATO keeps its door open [and bolsters] ... our vision of a Europe whole and at peace.” 

Montenegro Foreign Minister Igor Luksic said NATO’s decision reflected the great efforts his country had made to modernize and meet western civil society norms.

“Today we open a new chapter ... it is a great day for my country and for the alliance,” Luksic said.

“It is great news for the western Balkans, for its unity and security,” he said.

Montenegro’s parliament in September passed a resolution by 50 votes out of 79 to support the country’s accession to NATO.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Dec. 2 that the continuing expansion of NATO to the east would lead to retaliatory measures from Russia.

On Dec. 2, Viktor Ozerov, head of the Russian Federation Council’s defense and safety committee, said Russia will end joint projects with Montenegro if the ex-Communist country joins NATO, RIA news agency said. 

Russia last week described the expected decision on Montenegro as a “serious blow by the euro-Atlantic bloc.” 

“This sort of initiative has the real potential to bring about confrontation. It will not promote peace and stability in the Balkans nor in Europe in general,” Moscow said.

“It will only further complicate relations between Russia and NATO.” 

The small Balkans country of just over 600,000 people won its independence in 2006 following the bloody break-up of what was Yugoslavia.

It had been part of a federation with Serbia, a long-time Russian ally which Moscow has always regarded to be part of the same Slav family.