In his impassioned op-ed,
published by Milan-based daily newspaper il Giornale and translated by the foreign news portal
WhatTheySayAboutUSA.com,
Rossi asks why it is that the Western alliance's top commanders have
decided now, in the middle of the war against Daesh, is the best time
to continue the alliance's eastward expansion.
Recalling NATO's decision, made earlier this month, to invite
Montenegro to become the 29th member of the alliance, the journalist
noted that Moscow's inevitable response was to see the "invitation as a
slight which confirms all their suspicions of the West's expansionist
agenda –including in the Balkans."
"It would be interesting to know," Rossi
pondered, "why NATO has chosen this particular moment to provoke
aggression with Moscow? Surely NATO's top commanders don't assess the
NATO accession of a tiny Balkan nation as a greater priority than good
relations with Moscow – whose support is vital in the struggle
against the Islamic State, which President Obama himself has named a
'common enemy'?"
The
situation is especially confusing, the journalist suggested, given that
"Montenegro has been on the NATO waiting-list for ten years,
with public opinion there far from united on the idea of joining NATO,
resulting in continuous propaganda campaigns for joining the alliance,
(paid for with NATO cash)."
The expansion, Rossi warns, "comes at a time when there is already
heightened tension between Russia and the West. Several days ago Turkey –
a member of the NATO alliance, shot down a Russian warplane, which
could have triggered a cycle of retaliation; it was only thanks to cool
heads in the Kremlin that an international crisis was avoided. The
result of a visit by French President Francois Hollande to Moscow
[served as] the recognition of the role Russia is playing in Syria
against Daesh, along with increased willingness from the West
to coordinate its operations with those of the Kremlin."
"But now," the journalist lamented, the
decision over Montenegro "threatens a fresh divide. One gets the sense
that there is somebody within the Western alliance pulling all the stops
to wreck relations with Moscow."
Rossi recalled that in a recent, widely-publicized interview, NATO
Secretary Jens Stoltenberg — "the mastermind of the entire Montenegro
deal – made vicious allegations against Russia. Stoltenberg claimed that
Russia is a threat to security throughout the whole of Europe – on the
grounds of its aggressive policies directed at Ukraine, and its military
build-up, 'which hits an extreme which we have not seen since the end
of the Cold War.'"
"But how sure are we that this stereotype of a
threatening Russia – and of a NATO which is trying to save its members
from the rampaging 'bear from the East', corresponds with reality? Or
could it just be a justification for Western expansionist policies,
with Washington in the driver's seat?"
"A
realistic view," Rossi argues, is making it "clearer and clearer that
there is an ongoing encirclement of Russia by the West, which Russia
responds to with attempts to safeguard its own territories. The crisis
in Ukraine can also be viewed in this light."
Moreover, according to the journalist, a simple assessment "of the
military might of the opposing parties" shows "that Russia's military
power today is only one-fifth of what the old USSR could have mustered
–whilst NATO has enormously augmented its offensive (sorry, 'defensive')
arsenals over the last twenty years, gobbling up the countries of the
former Warsaw Pact and neighboring neutral countries in the process."
"If we look at military expenditure, the US
spends eight times more on its military than Russia. And, according
to the International Institute for Strategic Research, in 2014 the NATO
nations poured over $800 billion into defense spending –compared
with the less than $70 billion spent by Russia."
"To fully comprehend the deranged nature of Western thinking, we need
only refer to an article which appeared in La Stampa a few months back –
in which the authors suggested that Russia is not only getting ready
to attack all of Europe, but that it will be doing so with less
than half of NATO's military forces. Maybe we should just assume that
Russia is set on a path of suicide…"
Rossi
recalled that the only area where Russia is on a par with NATO is
in its nuclear capabilities, possessing "as the USA does, the so-called
nuclear 'triad' – an arsenal capable of being deployed simultaneously
in three different areas –on land, by air, and at sea."
"The last year," the journalist cautioned, "has seen the highest
tensions between Washington and Moscow since the Cold War," with the
Ukrainian crisis giving the US and its allies "a pretext for the mass
deployment of military forces in Eastern Europe and the Baltic states."
With both sides upping the ante, carrying out massive military
exercises and repeatedly accusing one another of flying military
aircraft and sailing fighting ships close to each other's borders, Rossi
emphasized that ultimately, "what is happening is not in Europe's
interests – and not in Russia's interests either. On the contrary, both
Europe and Russia need to build on a joint security understanding and
integration. Many challenges, from terrorism, to the economic crisis,
to energy issues, to finding balance in the Middle Eastern, are common
challenges."
"So who is fanning the flames? Who is
interested in driving a wedge between Russia and Europe? Who is pouring
oil on the gathering flames? Maybe we should look toward Washington
for the answers," Rossi concluded.