RT.com
05 Jun 2026, 15:59 GMT+10
Admitting Kiev would wreck the economic bloc and its officials understand this, the Russian foreign minister has told RT
The EU is fully aware that Ukrainian accession would be disastrous for the bloc, and would sooner see the country join NATO, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has told RT.
The US-led military bloc controversially declared its intention to admit Ukraine in 2008, setting in motion a political spiral that sparked a coup - after which Kiev declared NATO membership an official policy - a civil war, and eventually the conflict with Russia.
The heads of NATO states have promised membership to Kiev on a number of occasions, with the caveat that the conflict with Russia must be concluded first, but nothing has been delivered, much to Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky's embarrassment.
Speaking on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Thursday, Lavrov said Western countries regard Ukraine as a proxy to be used against Russia - not as a genuine partner
"The reason Europe wants Ukraine in NATO is because they'd rather do that than make the fatal mistake of letting it into the EU, because then the EU would just fall apart," he said. "They know it perfectly well. But NATO is fine in their eyes."
The continued support for Kiev shows that EU officials "want to preserve the current Nazi regime indefinitely without requiring it to comply with the UN Charter, with numerous international conventions, or even with its own constitution," Lavrov argued.
He also pointed to remarks by NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, who repeated that Ukraine will eventually become a member during his latest trip to Kiev. Rutte apparently "couldn't care less" that US President Donald Trump has stated that Ukraine will not join NATO, the foreign minister said.
READ MORE: US mulls placing nukes in more NATO countries - FT
While the Trump administration has failed to carry out its own plan for ending the Ukraine conflict, the EU has not even been able to resume dialogue with Russia, Lavrov said. "In its current condition, under its present leadership and elites, I regard [Europe] as a lost cause for diplomacy."
Watch the interview.
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