Russia urges West to move quickly to guarantee Ukraine won't join NATO
'Any further NATO expansion eastward is unacceptable,' Putin said at annual marathon news conference
Russian President Vladimir Putin turned up the pressure ever so slightly on Thursday by restating his demands for security guarantees, including rolling back NATO's eastward expansion and urging the West to move quickly.
Speaking during his annual marathon news conference with the international media, the Russian leader sounded a positive note by welcoming talks with the U.S., which are set to start in Geneva next month.
He warned, however, that Moscow expects the discussion to produce quick results.
"We have clearly and precisely let them know that any further NATO expansion eastward is unacceptable," Putin said.
Russia wants a written guarantee that Ukraine and other former Soviet countries will not be allowed into NATO and that the alliance's deployments in Eastern Europe be pulled. The United States and NATO have already rejected the first demand, saying membership is open to any qualifying country.
Moscow presented its demand amid soaring tensions over a Russian troop buildup near Ukraine that has stoked fears of a possible invasion. U.S. President Joe Biden warned Putin in a conference call earlier this month that Russia will face "severe consequences" if it attacks Ukraine.
Putin previously denied having plans to launch an attack, but has described a NATO expansion and weapons deployment in Ukraine as a "red line."
Asked Thursday if he could provide a guarantee that Russia will not invade Ukraine, Putin snapped in response: "It's you who must give us guarantees and give them immediately, now, and not have idle talk about it for decades.
"How would the Americans respond if we put our missiles on the U.S. borders with Canada or Mexico?" he exclaimed.
There is an impression that they are preparing a third military operation and warning us not to meddle.- Vladimir Putin
The U.S. and its allies have said they won't give Russia the kind of guarantee on Ukraine that Putin wants. American officials are conferring with European allies in advance of the Geneva talks.
Andrew Rasiulis, a defence expert with the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, said he believes the Russian strategy is to keep turning up the pressure to bleed concessions out of both Ukraine and the West. An all-out military action would be "extremely bloody" and hard to keep contained.
"As we all know from history, when things like that get rolling, it's very hard to control,"