Home News Ukraine war’s gains for Putin: A stronger NATO and a more decisive EU

Ukraine war’s gains for Putin: A stronger NATO and a more decisive EU

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has worked for years to undermine Europe’s collective institutions, especially NATO but also the European Union. But by invading Ukraine, a sovereign state in the middle of Europe, Mr. Putin is accomplishing the opposite.

Not only is NATO expansion on the table in a way it hasn’t been in years, but also the usually slow-moving and bureaucratic EU is showing new vigor: extending $500 million in military assistance to Ukraine in what is a first to a fellow European nation.

Why We Wrote This

Vladimir Putin didn’t want Ukraine in NATO. He may see Finland and Sweden join instead. Their shift is over more than just security. It also reflects a desire to uphold values like freedom and democracy.

Sounding almost as if she were addressing Mr. Putin directly, the EU’s chief executive, Ursula von der Leyen, described Ukraine in a speech last week as “one of us, and we want them in the European Union.”

On Friday, Finland and Sweden, two nations that long have maintained neutrality, attended a meeting of NATO foreign ministers. And public opinion in both countries is shifting dramatically, with polls indicating that for the first time, a majority favored NATO membership.

“This war has essentially been undertaken by Russia to affect the trajectory of Ukraine and prevent it from moving farther and farther West,” says Rajan Menon, director of the grand strategy program at Defense Priorities in Washington. “But from what we’re seeing from some European leaders and institutions, that may have backfired.”

WASHINGTON

When a pro-NATO group in Finland began circulating a petition last week demanding a referendum on whether the traditionally non-aligned country should join the U.S.-led transatlantic defense alliance, the response was overwhelming.

The 50,000 signatures required to prompt a referendum debate in parliament were obtained in a matter of hours in a country of only 5.5 million.

The referendum fervor was reflected in a poll released Monday by Finland’s state broadcaster Yle. For the first time in decades of asking Finns the same question, a majority of those polled – 53% – said they favored joining NATO. Just a month ago the Helsingen Sanomat newspaper put that number at less than 30%.

Why We Wrote This

Vladimir Putin didn’t want Ukraine in NATO. He may see Finland and Sweden join instead. Their shift is over more than just security. It also reflects a desire to uphold values like freedom and democracy.

What caused what former Finnish Prime Minister Alex Stubb called a “historic shift”?

In a word, Russia.

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