From VOA:
“'A new Europe' united against
Russia — even neutral Switzerland”
A continent that has spent most
of the past millennium at war with itself has united against Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine, with Germany reversing its historic policy against sending weapons
to conflict zones and even famously neutral Switzerland joining the rest of
Europe against Moscow. “It’s the rebirth of a new Europe,” said Michael McFaul,
a former U.S. ambassador to Russia. “I’m absolutely shocked, I want to tell you
honestly. It’s a historic shift. I think this will have major consequences
moving forward for the future of Europe, for the future of the transatlantic
alliance, for the future of NATO — just when all of those things were fraying.”
The European Union, for the first
time ever, agreed Sunday to directly finance the purchase and delivery of arms,
with plans to send more than half a billion dollars worth of military aid to
Ukraine as it battles Russian forces in what the president of the European
Commission called a “watershed moment.” Virtually all of European airspace is
now closed to Russian aircraft, including private jets. The E.U. also banned
Kremlin-backed media outlets and took steps to freeze Russian assets and cut
off the country’s access to the global financial system. French Ambassador to
the U.S. Philippe Etienne said on MSNBC Monday that the united front was
nothing less than “a turning point in the history of our continent.” Sweden,
which is not part of NATO and has maintained a policy of neutrality through
both World Wars and the Cold War, announced Monday it will send 5,000 anti-tank
weapons to Ukraine. The Swedish government said it is the first time the
Scandinavian country has sent arms to a country at war since 1939, when it
aided its neighbor Finland against a Soviet invasion.
Even Switzerland joined the
fray. Neutrality has been a survival tactic for Switzerland that kept the
alpine nation independent since Napoleon. It is not part of the European Union
nor NATO. But bowing to public pressure from its citizens and every
party in its parliament but the far-right, the Swiss government announced
Monday it will join the EU’s sanction against Russia, bar entry to some
high-level Russians with Swiss connections and close Swiss airspace to Russian
flights. The move is significant not only symbolically, but because Switzerland’s
infamously secretive banks are a favorite of Russian oligarchs. “We are
in an extraordinary situation where extraordinary measures could be decided,”
Swiss President Ignazio Cassis said at a press conference Monday, though he
noted that Swiss neutrality remains intact since the country is not sending
military aid or getting involved in the fight itself.
Experts say the most significant
action, though, may be Germany’s. The most powerful country in continental
Europe has for years pursued friendlier relations with Moscow and refused to
sell weapons to countries involved in armed conflicts as part of a post-World
War II doctrine of pacifism. “The Russian invasion of Ukraine marks a turning
point,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in a statement. “It threatens our
entire post-war order. In this situation, it is our duty to do our utmost to
support Ukraine in defending itself against Vladimir Putin’s invading army.” Thanks
to economic necessity and a sense of historic obligation to atone for the
crimes committed by the Nazis, Berlin sought engagement instead of
confrontation with Russia. “There’s an exaggerated perception in German public
opinion, I would say a misperception, that engaging with Russia during the Cold
War led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Germany did more business with the
USSR than other European countries,” said Charles Lichfield, deputy director of
the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. “That has informed German
behavior.” As recently as last week, Germany not only refused to send its
weapons to Ukraine, but it blocked other countries like the Netherlands from
sending their own German-made weapons to Kyiv. But Berlin dramatically reversed
course over the weekend, announcing plans to send at least 1,000 anti-tank
weapons and 500 Stinger anti-aircraft defense systems to Ukraine, paving the
way for virtually the entire continent to join the fight. “There was a drive
towards unity and Germany was an obstacle,” said Lichfield. “It is striking
that once the German obstacle was lifted, the EU got in.”
Tobias Vestner, head of the
security and law program at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, said the
Swiss have long prided themselves on being a safe space for international
organizations and dialog, like the summit it hosted last year between President
Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin. But Swiss citizens are
beginning to rethink their role in an increasingly globalized world, Vestner
said, especially after a pandemic that did not respect international borders. “This
is something we’ve never seen before,” he said. “So I wouldn’t be surprised if
you see a change in the way neutrality is interpreted and applied.”
^ Switzerland has been neutral
since 1815 (207 years) and because of Putin and Russia have now ended that
neutrality - even Hitler couldn't do that. That speaks volumes. ^
https://www.aol.com/europe-united-against-russia-even-220000763.html
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