Warsaw Pact
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Founded | Warsaw |
---|---|
Poland | |
Warsaw | |
Poland | |
Dissolved | 1 July 1991 |
Formation | Poland |
Abbreviation | WAPA |
Supreme Commander | Ivan Konev |
Pyotr Lushev | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1215644 |
About Warsaw Pact
The Warsaw Pact, formally known as the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, was a collective defence treaty signed in Warsaw, Poland between the Soviet Union and seven Eastern Bloc satellite states of Central and Eastern Europe in May 1955, during the Cold War.
What weapons is the UK giving Ukraine?
... Much of Ukraine s weaponry was designed and manufactured in former Warsaw Pact eastern European countries...
Ukraine crisis: Five reasons why Putin might not invade
... Not only have the three Baltic republics (all former Soviet Socialist Republics) Poland and other former Warsaw Pact countries all joined Nato but now the prospect of neighbouring Ukraine doing the same is too much for Moscow to bear...
Jeremy Corbyn was wrong on Nato, says Sir Keir Starmer
... Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, a number of former Warsaw Pact countries became Nato members...
Russia-Ukraine tensions: Zelensky praises allied response
... In reality, President Vladimir Putin is seeking to roll Nato back to pre-1997 borders, so no combat units are deployed in Poland or the Baltics, all former members of Russia s communist-era Warsaw Pact defence alliance...
Ukraine: What is Nato and why doesn't Russia trust it?
... In 1955 Soviet Russia responded to Nato by creating its own military alliance of Eastern European communist countries, called the Warsaw Pact...
National archives: the officials hovered 'Farce' idea of the Russia-Nato accession
... Nato has grown enormously in the last 25 years, and admits a number of countries with common borders with Russia, such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, as well as several former Warsaw Pact countries, including Romania, Bulgaria and Albania...
Nato explained in pictures
... Poland s Prime Minister Jozef Cyrankiewicz signing the Warsaw Pact In 1955, the Soviet Union created a counter-alliance called the Warsaw Pact, made up of communist countries...
Nato alliance experiencing brain death, says Macron
... It set up its own Warsaw Pact military alliance, including the then Communist countries of eastern Europe, in 1955...
Ukraine crisis: Five reasons why Putin might not invade
The optics look dreadful.
Russia has deployed More Than two-thirds of its military combat capability to within Striking Distance of Ukraine's borders.
Its 30,000 troops that were supposed to withdraw from neighbouring Belarus at the weekend are Still There . So are pontoon bridges and other logistic equipment needed for an invasion.
Violence is flaring in the two Russian-backed breakaway republics in Eastern Ukraine. Russia's demands from Nato remain unmet and diplomacy has So Far failed to bring about any significant withdrawal of Russian forces.
Meanwhile western leaders and their intelligence chiefs have been sounding The Alarm , asserting that President Putin has already given The Order to invade Ukraine.
And yet, there are reasons To Believe that a Russian invasion of Ukraine will not happen. Here are some of them.
1. It will be bloodyUkraine will resist, at least initially. Its forces are vastly outnumbered and outgunned by Russia's but that doesn't mean there won't be severe casualties on both sides.
If Moscow were to undertake a full-scale invasion, capturing The Major cities of Kyiv, Kharkiv and Odessa by force then it could well involve protracted and costly Street Fighting where The Ukrainians would be on home ground.
2. It won't be popular At HomeA recent poll of young Russians found that a majority were opposed to waging war against their Slavic neighbour.
The prospect of large numbers of both Russians and Ukrainians dying in A War of Putin's choice and Russians Coming Home in coffins will not play well At Home .
3. Western sanctions will hurtHow deep the threatened western sanctions go will, in all likelihood, depend on how deep Russia goes into Ukraine.
Much as western leaders talk of Nato unanimity the reality is that Germany and Hungary, for example, which depend in large part on Russian gas, are not as hawkish as Britain, which is not.
But sanctions will still hurt the relatively small Russian economy, especially if it is frozen out of the Swift banking system as some are calling for.
4. There will be a high political costWhen Russia invaded and annexed Crimea in 2014 it became an international pariah for years. The same would happen This Time , only worse.
Even China, a strategic ally, has warned against it with its Foreign Minister Wang Yi telling the Munich Security Conference: " The sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of every country should be safeguarded. Ukraine is no exception. "
US Senator Chris Murphy believes that contrary to the optics, Putin is in a severely weak position and " a potentially disastrous invasion of Ukraine would be his last resort".
He believes that after 2013 Ukraine's people made it clear they no longer wanted to be in Russia's orbit and forcing them back with a costly war would devastate The Russian economy and possibly even unseat President Putin.
5. Putin has already made his pointMoscow has now got The West 's attention when It Comes to the perceived injustices of the post-Cold War security order in Europe.
From Putin's perspective, Nato has welched on The Deal not to expand eastwards towards Russia's borders.
Not only have the three Baltic republics (all former Soviet Socialist Republics) Poland and other former Warsaw Pact countries all joined Nato but now the prospect of neighbouring Ukraine doing the same is too much for Moscow to bear.
Putin wants this changed or the Damoclean sword of a Russian invasion will forever hang over Ukraine.
" He wants to negotiate a new security deal but from a position of strength" says Ghanem Nuseibeg, a Senior Visiting Fellow at Harvard. " In a way he has already partially succeeded with Macron talking of a new security order. "
Set against all of the above are some very compelling reasons To Believe that a Russian invasion will happen, and imminently, even if it is confined to just the two internationally unrecognised breakaway republics in The East of Ukraine.
The size, scale and nature of Russia's military build-up go far beyond the needs of a normal military exercise. You don't ask soldiers to give blood to field dressing stations if you're just on manoeuvres.
Moscow's two core demands from The West remain unmet, namely A Promise that Ukraine will never be allowed to join Nato and that the western alliance withdraw all its forces from countries that joined Nato after 1997.
Ultimately, the Kremlin has clearly decided that it cannot tolerate its giant, Slavic-speaking neighbour Ukraine being firmly in the western camp, becoming part of Nato and the EU. President Putin has made it abundantly clear by his actions So Far that he will do whatever it takes to stop that from happening.
Read more:Source of news: bbc.com