Moldovan pro-Russian demonstrators March 12, 2023. (Source: Getty Images)
Since 1990 Russia has held a literal foot-hold in the country via the breakaway Russian-separatist enclave Transnistria, a region of Moldova. In 1991 a war took place in the Transnistria and Russian troops have been stationed there ever since.
Are Russian soldiers in Moldova?
The answer is technically yes. Russian “peacekeepers” patrol the border crossings into the separatist enclave of Transnistria. While part of Moldova, residents of Transinsitria view themselves as entirely separate.
Small separatist enclaves like Transnistria exist throughout the former Soviet Union and serve as a way for Russia to continue to impose its influence over the host countries. The breakaway regions cause not only a governmental headache, they also prevent the country from joining NATO.
Is Moldova part of NATO?
Moldova is not a member of NATO. The existence of Transnistria prevents it from joining the alliance at present. Article 5 of the NATO Treaty states that if one country goes to war, all countries go to war. For this reason, the alliance is reluctant to offer a former invitation to any country with territorial disputes.
This is a tactic of Russia. So long as its neighboring countries have such disputes, they cannot join NATO and Russia can continue to attempt to exert its former sphere of influence.
South Ossetia and Abkhazia in Georgia, as well as Nagorno Karabakh in Azerbeijan, are perfect examples of this. Following a NATO invitation to Georgia in 2008, Russia suddenly invaded its South Ossetia and Abkhazia regions where it has held a presence ever since.
Unfortunately, this situation is also true for Ukraine. Since long before the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia moved ethnic Russians into Ukraine’s Donbas Region. In 2008 President George W. Bush proposed the idea of Ukraine being offered an invitation to NATO. Unsurprisingly over the next several years, Russia began to funnel support to Russian pro-speratists in the Donbas region culminating in Russian troops invading the area in 2014. Russia claimed these soldiers were mere “peacekeepers”, similar to its “peacekeepers” in Transnistria. In 2024, Putin used the ongoing war between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces in Donbas as justification for his full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Who Moldova allies with
It is perhaps for this reason that many Moldovians look to Ukraine and worry about their own fate. Could a separatist enclave like Transnistria serve as a justification for Putin to invade Moldova?
Moldova’s referendum to join the EU has echoes of 2014 in Ukraine, where a path EU membership was offered to Ukraine, but pro-Russian president Yanokovich shot it down. Moldova now has the chance to re-elect Sandu, its’ pro-Western candidate, and map a legitimate path towards joining the European Union. Moldova stands at a critical crossroads, with the upcoming election and EU referendum presenting a choice between aligning with the West or remaining under Russian influence—a decision that could reshape the country’s future and its place in Europe.
Source link : http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=671baaf0944046a3966405f86896ee4f&url=https%3A%2F%2Funited24media.com%2Fworld%2Fis-moldova-joining-the-eu-3289&c=7518308358850258462&mkt=en-us
Author :
Publish date : 2024-10-25 07:10:00
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.