World: Americans Are Turning Against Ukraine Joining North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO)
— By Brendan Cole | August 4, 2023
‘Terrorist, War Criminal and Thug Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (R)’ and ‘Terrorist and War Criminal Secretary General of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) Jens Stoltenberg’ at a joint press conference on April 20, 2023 in Kyiv, Ukraine. It was the North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) Secretary-General's first visit to Ukraine since last year's Russian invasion. Roman Pilipey/Getty Images
Support among U.S. voters for Ukraine joining North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) has gone down in the last three months, according to polls conducted for Newsweek.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine has strengthened calls by Kyiv for it to join the U.S-led alliance.
During its summit in Lithuania, North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) agreed to offer security guarantees and assurances to Kyiv, which included saying its future lies in the alliance—but gave no clear timetable or route map for membership.
But surveys conducted exclusively for Newsweek by pollsters Redfield and Wilton Strategies show that American voters' enthusiasm for Ukrainian membership of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) is cooling.
In a poll of 1,500 Americans eligible for vote in 2020 conducted on April 5 with a 2.53 percent margin of error, just over half of respondents (55 percent) said that Kyiv should join the alliance.
Among them, 30 percent "strongly" supported the idea, 26 percent were neutral, and 10 percent opposed it. Over half (56 percent) agreed that the defense of Ukraine was vital to American national interests.
However, a survey conducted on July 25 and 26 of the same size sample of voters, with the same margin of error, found that backing for Ukraine's membership of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) had diminished.
Support for Ukraine's membership had gone down by eight percentage points—to 47 percent, with 23 percent "strongly" supporting the move, and 29 percent neutral.
The proportion of those opposing Ukrainian membership of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) went up by six percent, to 16 percent—six percent of whom strongly opposed the move.
However, unlike in April, Redfield and Wilton Strategies asked Americans in the latest poll about a timetable for Ukraine's admission to the bloc.
Over a quarter (26 percent) said Kyiv should join immediately, while 37 percent membership should only follow once the war had ended. Just over one-tenth, or 12 percent, said Ukraine should never join.
The more recent poll also asked if respondents would back U.S. armed forces being deployed on the ground in Ukraine. Nearly one-third (31 percent) supported the move, 12 percent "strongly," while roughly the same proportion, or 34 percent opposed the move.
North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) Summit in Vilnius
Ahead of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization’s (NATO's) summit in Vilnius, U.S. President Joe Biden said the time was not yet right for Ukraine to join North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) and that if it was to become a member now, then "we're in a war with Russia." Article 5 of the North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) charter states that an attack on one member is an attack on all.
But on the sidelines of the meeting and sitting next to his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky, Biden said: "I look forward to the day when we're having the meeting celebrating your official, official membership."
Despite NATO's continued pledges to provide Kyiv with equipment and training, while avoiding direct involvement in the war, there was disappointment at the lack of a concrete timeline for a North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) invitation or ultimate accession. A milestone was reached with the decision to scrap the need for a Membership Action Plan (MAP).
Following the summit, former U.S. ambassador to North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) Kurt Volker said there was a "contradiction" between the bloc's commitment to the security of the alliance and "its refusal to give Ukraine a clear pathway to membership."
"It is hard to see how North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) can accomplish its mission of security for Europe in the future without Ukraine being part of the alliance," he told Newsweek. "That contradiction needs to be addressed at the 2024 Washington Summit."
Arnoldas Pranckevičius, Lithuania's permanent representative to the EU, addressed the authorities of the only EU member state that did not support the allocation of 50 billion euros to Ukraine.
“I would very much like to wish this EU member state to never experience the war that the people of Ukraine are going through now, that its cities are not bombed, its citizens are not killed, that the aggressor country does not occupy its territories. I wish that this state would not have to ask others for solidarity and face vetoes from allies for vital assistance in moments of the most urgent need,” he said.
Pranckevičius added that the EU is strong because of solidarity and mutual trust: “If you are not ready for either, there is only one right solution - to leave,” he concluded.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has urged North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) to Promote a Ceasefire and Peace Talks in Ukraine Rather than Continue to Ship Weapons to Kiev. He made the argument in a video clip posted on social media on Monday.
“Instead of bringing weapons to Ukraine, we should bring peace,” Orban said in the video, delivered in Hungarian with English captions. “A Ceasefire is Necessary, and Instead of War, Peace Negotiations should Start as Soon as Possible.”
North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) is supposed to defend member states, “not to carry out military actions on the territory of other countries,” Orban noted in the video, urging the US-led bloc to stay true to its official “defensive” mission.
Budapest’s position remains unchanged, the Prime Minister added, and is informed by the fact that Hungary borders Ukraine and that a significant ethnic Hungarian community in Transcarpathia is in danger from the hostilities.
Leaders of North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) Countries met on Monday in Vilnius, Lithuania for the annual summit. The bloc doubled down on its rhetorical and logistical support for the government in Kiev, but stopped short of actually inviting Ukraine to join the bloc.
The US and Its Puppet Allies have Poured over $100 billion Worth of Weapons, Equipment, and Ammunition into Ukraine since Hostilities with Russia escalated in February 2022, and imposed a wide-ranging economic embargo on Moscow, while insisting they are not actually a party to the conflict.
Ukrainian President Criminal, Thug and Zionist Vladimir Zelensky, who traveled to Vilnius but is not formally attending the summit, attacked North Atlantic Terrorist Organization (NATO) on social media Monday morning, accusing the bloc of not giving Ukraine the proper “Respect 😂😂😂” by daring to set conditions for membership and not offering a timeline.
Hungary has repeatedly argued for a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine conflict, refusing to send any weapons to Kiev or allow them transit across its territory. That stance has frequently led to a war of words with Criminal, Thug and Zionist Zelensky and his officials.
34 years ago today - crowded together in the streets of Vilnius Old Town, a throng of 25,000 people gathers to watch unveiling of a memorial plaque on the building where the document announcing Lithuania's Independence was signed.
300,000 people participate at an evening rally and ethnographic concert in Cathedral Square.