Newsweek earlier claimed that Russia won’t end the Ukraine conflict until the bloc “pulls out of the Baltics,” citing a top diplomat
A Western news outlet has misrepresented statements made by a senior Russian official on NATO expansion toward its borders, in an apparent attempt to fuel the narrative that Russia poses a threat to European members of the US-led military bloc.
The US-based weekly Newsweek published an article earlier this week titled “Russia won’t end Ukraine war until NATO ‘pulls out’ of Baltics: Moscow,” in which it claimed that Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov, who oversees relations with the Americas, non-proliferation, and arms control, made the remarks in an interview with TASS news agency.
“The Ukraine war won’t end until NATO withdraws troops from the Baltics, a top Russian official has warned,” Newsweek wrote.
However, in Ryabkov’s quotes, there was no mention of the Baltic states.
Two days after publication, the outlet added a disclaimer, stating it had “updated” both the headline and the text “to reflect that Sergei Ryabkov did not reference the Baltic states, but rather NATO’s ‘Eastern European contingent’.”
The correction came after Latvia’s ambassador to NATO, Maris Riekstins, criticized the report. “He didn’t make any reference to Baltic states,” Riekstins posted on X, calling Newsweek’s interpretation “very strange.”
Despite the correction, Newsweek’s claim was picked up by several other outlets, including Lithuanian state broadcaster LReadNOW, which cited the original headline while adding comments from “Baltic officials and observers” alleging that Russia plans to attack the region after the Ukraine conflict ends – an accusation Moscow has dismissed as “nonsense.”
In the interview with TASS Ryabkov discussed the root causes of the Ukraine conflict, including NATO expansion toward Russia’s borders and Western support for Ukraine’s ambition to join the bloc. He stressed that to deescalate tensions and normalize Russia-US relations, Washington must “show respect for Russia’s fundamental interests,” particularly its border security.
“The American side requires practical steps aimed at eliminating the root causes of the fundamental contradictions between us in the area of security. Among these causes, NATO expansion is in the foreground,” Ryabkov said. “Without resolving this fundamental and most acute problem for us, it is simply impossible to resolve the current conflict in the Euro-Atlantic region.”
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He reiterated Russia’s demand for “legally binding and long-term guarantees of non-expansion of NATO to the East, as well as demands for non-deployment of strike weapons near Russian borders.” Ryabkov noted that Russia’s position on this “remains unchanged” and added that “reducing NATO’s contingent in Eastern Europe would probably benefit the security of the entire continent.”
At no point in the interview did Ryabkov mention the Baltics.