Opinion | Ukraine Needs a Roadmap to NATO Membership ASAP

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    This means taking steps to ensure that Ukraine 1) wins this war and reestablishes full control over its internationally recognized 1991 borders; and 2) is fully anchored in the security and economic arrangements that from 1945 until 2014 made Europe a continent of peace, prosperity and cooperation. The transatlantic community can only be stable and secure if Ukraine is secure. Ukraine’s entry into NATO, fulfilling the promise made at the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, would achieve that.

    In Vilnius, NATO heads of state and government should offer an unequivocal statement of alliance support for Ukraine and for Kyiv’s aim of regaining sovereignty and territorial integrity within its 1991 borders. They should further underscore their readiness to supply Ukraine weapons — including longer-range missiles such as ATACMS, Western fighter planes and tanks — in sufficient quantities to prevail on the battlefield. This will demonstrate the allies’ unequivocal commitment to Ukrainian victory and send a clear message to Moscow that its military situation in Ukraine will only grow worse the longer the conflict continues.

    In Vilnius, the alliance should launch a roadmap that will lead clearly to Ukraine’s membership in NATO at the earliest achievable date. As with Finland and Sweden, the process can bypass the Membership Action Plan in light of the close and ongoing interactions between NATO and Ukraine. NATO heads of state and government should task the Council in permanent session to develop recommendations on the timing and modalities of an accession process for Ukraine for decision at the next NATO summit in Washington in 2024.

    To enhance Ukraine’s security until it joins NATO, NATO and Ukraine at Vilnius should establish a deterrence and defense partnership under which:

    · the allies will provide all necessary arms, training, equipment, and intelligence and other support to deter or defeat ongoing and new aggression by Russia; and

    · Ukraine will continue to carry out essential steps to expedite its integration into the alliance and its command structures.

    At the Vilnius summit, the allies and Ukraine should upgrade the NATO-Ukraine Commission to a NATO-Ukraine Council. The Council will oversee the deterrence and defense partnership and serve as a crisis consultation mechanism — in the spirit of Article 4 of the Washington Treaty — in the event of a threat to the territorial integrity, sovereignty, or security of Ukraine or any of the NATO member states.

    In Vilnius, the allies should reaffirm their commitment to enhance coordinated measures to meet Ukraine’s urgent needs for military and defense equipment, focusing directly on air defense systems, long-range missiles and necessary ammunition, tanks and advanced combat aircraft.

    To expand practical assistance to Ukraine, the allies should invite Ukraine to assign additional liaison officers at NATO headquarters and commands to support the launch of a joint process of developing a Ukrainian long-term national security strategy, national defense strategy, and national defense posture compatible with NATO standards and planning.

    The allies should also approve the updated Comprehensive Assistance Package to facilitate Ukraine attaining full interoperability with NATO forces and making a comprehensive transition to NATO standards. The focus should be on the transition to Western weapons systems; creation of a modern, NATO-compatible air and missile defense system; creation of a medical rehabilitation system for wounded soldiers, as well as a system for soldier reintegration into civilian life and a comprehensive demining effort.

    Vilnius can be a historic NATO summit. The above steps would bring closer NATO membership for Ukraine and, with it, the elimination of gray zones and ambiguous security situations that have proven to be an invitation to aggression. The result would be a more stable, secure, and prosperous transatlantic community.

    Signed:

    Stephen E. Biegun
    Former U.S. deputy secretary of state

    Hans Binnendijk
    Former director for defense policy and arms control at the National Security Council; distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council

    Stephen Blank
    Senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute

    Gen. Philip Breedlove (ret.)
    U.S. Air Force, 17th Supreme Allied Commander Europe; distinguished professor at the Sam Nunn School, Georgia Institute of Technology

    Ian Brzezinski
    Former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Europe and NATO Policy; senior fellow at the Atlantic Council

    Dora Chomiak
    Chief executive officer at Razom for Ukraine

    Gen. Wesley Clark (ret.)
    U.S. Army, 12th Supreme Allied Commander, Europe; senior fellow at the UCLA Burkle Center

    Luke Coffey
    Senior fellow at the Hudson Institute

    Andrew D’Anieri
    Assistant director at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center

    Larry Diamond
    Senior fellow at the Hoover Institution; senior fellow at Stanford University

    Amb. Paula Dobriansky
    Former under secretary of state for global affairs

    Amb. Eric S. Edelman
    Former under secretary of defense for policy 2005-2009

    Evelyn Farkas
    Executive director of the McCain Institute; former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine, Eurasia

    Daniel Fata
    Former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Europe and NATO; senior advisor, Center for Strategic and International Studies

    Amb. Daniel Fried
    Former assistant secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia; former U.S. ambassador to Poland

    Francis Fukuyama
    Senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University

    Melinda Haring
    Nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center

    Amb. John Herbst
    Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine; senior director at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center

    Maj. General William C. Hix (ret.)
    U.S. Army

    Lieut. Gen. Ben Hodges (ret.)
    Former commanding general, U.S. Army Europe

    Donald N. Jensen
    Adjunct professor at the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, Johns Hopkins University

    Andrea Kendall-Taylor
    Former Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Russia and Eurasia

    Amb. John Kornblum
    Former U.S. ambassador to Germany

    David Kramer
    Former U.S. assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights, and labor; executive director at the George W. Bush Institute

    Franklin Kramer
    Distinguished fellow and board director at the Atlantic Council; former assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs

    Matthew Kroenig
    Vice president and senior director at the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security

    Jan M. Lodal
    Distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council

    Lieut. Gen. Doug Lute (ret.)
    Former U.S. Army; former U.S. ambassador to NATO 2013-17

    Jane Holl Lute
    Former deputy secretary of homeland security

    Shelby Magid
    Deputy director at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center

    Tom Malinowski
    Former U.S. member of Congress; senior fellow at the McCain Institute

    Nadia McConnell
    President of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation

    Robert McConnell
    Co-founder of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation; director of external relations at the Friends of Ukraine Network

    Amb. Michael McFaul
    Former U.S. Ambassador to Russia; director at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University

    Amb. P. Michael McKinley
    Former U.S. ambassador to Peru, Colombia, Afghanistan, and Brazil

    Amb. Carlos Pascual
    Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine

    Amb. Steven Pifer
    Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine

    Amb. Stephen Sestanovich
    Former U.S. ambassador-at-large for the former Soviet Union 1997-2001; senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations; professor at Columbia University

    Amb. Andras Simonyi
    Former Hungarian ambassador to NATO; nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council

    Angela Stent
    Nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution

    Amb. William B. Taylor
    Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine

    Amb. Alexander Vershbow
    Distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council; former NATO deputy secretary general; former U.S. ambassador to Russia and South Korea

    Amb. Melanne Verveer
    Former U.S. ambassador-at-large for Global Women’s Issues; executive director at the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security

    Alexander Vindman
    Lieutenant Colonel (ret.), U.S. Army

    Amb. Kurt Volker
    Former U.S. ambassador to NATO; former U.S. special representative for Ukraine negotiations

    Amb. Marie Yovanovitch
    Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine

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    #Opinion #Ukraine #Roadmap #NATO #Membership #ASAP
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

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