Gordon Hahn: NATO Expansion, Maidan Ukraine, and the Donbass War

By Gordon M. Hahn

December 15, 2021

It is now quite clear, as I have stated for decades, that NATO expansion is the main cause of U.S.-Russian and WesternRussian tensions, and the Russian Angst over said expansion is the cause of the Ukrainian crisis sparked in winter 2013-2014.

It appears that Putin is escalating the stakes in the Ukrainian crisis in an effort to solve it and the overall problem of NATO expansion and European security. The positioning of Russian troops closer to the Ukrainian border – not on the border as is being reported – is an attempt to concentrate the minds of the West and bring the main driver of the Ukrainian crisis on the Western side – the U.S. – into the Minsk 2 process directly or otherwise.

His highlighting the issue has the important side benefit of putting the issue in a central place before Western publics and unmasking what is often the stealthy nature of NATO expansion processes.

Originally published at Gordon Hahns’ homepage

It was the American policy of NATO expansion – America drives NATO policy – that brought us the crisis in Ukraine. The crisis is the inevitable outcome of the first round of expansion to the Czech Republic and Ukraine’s neighbours Hungary and Poland pushed by the Clinton administration and ensuing rounds of NATO expansion pushed by the George Bush Jr administration.

It is not just the authoritarian Putin who resists NATO expansion. Almost all Russia does, and this is because of several centuries of Russian history that has seen Western powers repeatedly meddle, interfere, and intervene in and invade, shaping a security culture that values highly vigilance against external threats, internal divisions, and any connection – collusion – between the two.

Pro-democratic and pro-Western Russian president Boris Yeltsin, therefore, was also adamantly opposed to NATO expansion. He literally blew up at Clinton during the 1994 Budapest summit, well before the decision to expand had even been made.

Still two years before the decision, Clinton went to Moscow in May 1995 for the 50th-anniversary celebrations of the victory over Hitler, and Yeltsin regaled Clinton in no uncertain terms about NATO expansion, seeing “nothing but humiliation” for Russia, he declared: “For me to agree to the borders of NATO expanding towards those of Russia – that would constitute a betrayal on my part of the Russian people.”

Putin alluded to this last week when he issued his call for a treaty codifying a ban on NATO expansion any further east – a violation of explicit promises to the last Soviet leader would not expand “one inch” beyond East Germany: “Why was it necessary to expand NATO to our borders? Who can answer this question? There is no good answer, it does not exist. We had an almost idyllic picture of relations, especially in the mid-1990s. We were almost allies.”

As is well known, Putin and Yeltsin before him suggested the possibility of Russia’s entry into NATO but they were rebuffed and ignored, respectively.

The fact that Putin has raised the NATO issue directly to the West now is a function of several factors.

The Minsk 2 process has collapsed and Ukraine continues to fail in fulfilling key elements of the agreement, for example, by directly negotiating with the Donbass rebel regimes on a special autonomous status within Ukraine for them.

As the peace process stalled, in part because Zelenskiy cannot withstand ultranationalist/neofascist pressures to cease negotiating with hated Russia, Zelenskiy’s popularity has nosedived. The rating’s fall has little to no connection to the ongoing war in Donbass but is a result of economic factors, the Russian language issue, corruption and other purely domestic issues.

With Zelenskiy’s ratings collapsed and a broad opposition coalition arrayed against him, the Ukrainian president has abandoned his attempt to disarm and contain illegally armed fascist groups and instead has courted them.

The founder of the neo-fascist Right Sector and Volunteer Ukrainian Corps, Dmitro Yarosh, was appointed advisor to the chief of staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, and Zelenskiy recently awarded the ‘Hero of Ukraine’ award to one of their members, who has repeatedly violated the ceasefire agreement on the front.

It is on this background that Putin has Russian troops leaning forward.

In short, neither the Donbass nor Putin has a partner with which to talk. Putin has turned to Washington now because the crisis is deepening and is only set to get worse. Completely without domestic allies and the precipitous fall of Zelenskiy’s own and his party’s now disastrously popularity ratings, there is likely to be a major political crisis in Ukraine next year.

Moreover, at next year’s NATO summit, Ukraine is poised to gain a NATO Membership Action Plan (MAP) that will begin the process of Kyiv’s accession to the alliance and the transformation of one of the two main traditional invasion routes into Russia into NATO territory. This will happen on a background where already the West is sending weapons to Ukraine, training the Ukrainian army, including its neo-fascist units.

The possibility of NATO in Crimea and Russia’s loss of a base for its Black Sea Fleet was key in Putin’s decision to seize the peninsula after Maidan. Without the senseless Maidan revolt – leaving aside here the brutal terrorist culmination of sniper fire targeting both police and demonstrators carried out by the Maidan’s neo-fascist wing – or without a Russian naval base and tens of thousands of Russian troops based in Sevastopol, there would have been no annexation of Crimea. Full stop.

Now the possibility emerges that NATO could incorporate Ukraine despite its territorial stateness problem in the Donbass, bringing NATO into the civil war’s calculus by boosting the Ukrainian army’s prospects for defeating the Donbass rebels. Thus, Putin will have little choice but to intervene militarily in Donbass, seizing and annexing it and daring the Ukraine-enhanced West to challenge the Russian army.

The alternative to this near-doomsday scenario, with asymmetrical and other forms, including nuclear escalation waiting in the wings, is obvious and imperative to choose. As I have repeatedly argued, the West should agree to militarily non-aligned, neutral status – no NATO, CSTO, or SCO membership – for Ukraine.

EU membership would remain an open option for Kyiv, and the Donbass would be fully reintegrated into Ukraine, with a degree of autonomy to be negotiated directly between Kyiv and the Donbass with Western, including more active American, mediation in accordance with Minsk 2 or a Minsk 3, revised to take into account American participation.

If this is not done, Putin might use a real or fake neo-fascist or official Kievan provocation or mistake in order to seize the Donbass in order to preempt any further Kievan move there. He then might try to use the Donbass’s return to full Ukrainian control as a bargaining chip for a deal on Ukraine’s neutral status.

This would be dangerous enough, and, unfortunately, NATO and Ukraine view the struggle on the eastern front as a zero-sum game.

If Ukraine receives a NATO Membership Action Plan (MAP), it is a victory for the ‘free world.’ If not, Putin wins. The prospect of Putin ‘winning’ is becoming more objectionable in the West and Kyiv than the prospect of war, a formula for precisely that: War.  

And Ukraine is just one of three problems on the eastern front. Belarus and Moldova are each almost as intractable. This week’s inconclusive virtual Biden-Putin summit keeps the clock ticking and the tension ratcheting up. All this risk to the national security of all of Europe: For what precisely?

For the sake of NATO expansion. For a NATO that could not prevail in Afghanistan, despite all the expenditure in blood and treasure, and will not stand to defend Ukraine even if Russia was to invade.

And if NATO did move to fight Russia over Ukraine, what would that entail?

Nothing other than the potential for a third world war and a first nuclear one.

Originally published at Gordon Hahn’s homepage

The author

About the author

Gordon M. Hahn, PhD, is a Senior Researcher at the Center for Terrorism and Intelligence Studies (CETIS), Akribis Group, San Jose, California, www.cetisresearch.org; an expert analyst at Corr Analytics, www.canalyt.com.

Hahn is also an analyst at Geostrategic Forecasting Corporation in Chicago, www.geostrategicforecasting.com

He is the author of the forthcoming book from McFarland Publishers Ukraine Over the Edge: Russia, the West, and the Making of the Ukrainian Crisis and ‘New Cold War

Please help TFF remain truly independent by contributing if you benefited from this article

[paypal-donation]

Share

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

Jan Oberg May 15, 2026 Go to this Fox News page and scroll the whole way down: President Donald Trump tells the world that his meeting with President Xi Jinping yielded a lot of very concrete political and economic results – of course, only where the Chinese side, according to him, agreed with him. He does not mention the Taiwan issue, but Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says that it did not feature prominently in their talks and that the US policy on Taiwan has not changed. Then go to China Daily – or Global Times – and you will see that for the Chinese it is framework, principles, structure of cooperation etc. that matters – all embedded in the overall idea of “constructive bilateral relationship of strategic stability.” Nowhere is any concrete agreement or deal – all that Trump refers to – mentioned. At the general level, this gives you insights into the very different social...
In contrast to most, we’ll bring alternatives, solutions, hope and strategies for a better future. Times are dangerous, yes, but that only intensifies the need for constructive thinking and action! Jan Oberg, TFF director April 13, 2026 The new TFF Peace Pulse uses video messages in a new way: Max 3-5-minute-long comments, ideas or perhaps mini-lectures, all about peace – positive peace. We launch them today on April 13, 2026 with a carefully crafted visual aesthetic fitting the content. We hope to publish them regularly from now on. We launch Peace Pulse (PP) – for a number of reasons. The world is in chaos, and there are countless reasons to feel concerned, frustrated, even angry. The atmosphere is saturated with doom and gloom, with negative energy and rear‑mirror thinking, while vision, imagination, alternatives, strategies and genuine future‑mindedness remain in short supply. And without them, we simply can’t save the world. Looking at problems from a hundred angles will...
Jan Oberg, TFF director April 9, 2026 I was recently invited to have a good, long talk about the world – and, of course, about peace too – with Boris Malagurski on his Weight of Chains Channel on YouTube. It was a real joy and seems to have been greatly appreciated by the viewers too. Mr Malagurski and I shall of course be grateful if you share this conversation in your circles – of course, only if you like what you see and hear  And remember that this one – like hundreds of others with TFF Associates – can be enjoyed at our TFF Video Collection.

Recent Articles

Jan Oberg May 15, 2026 Go to this Fox News page and scroll the whole way down: President Donald Trump tells the world that his meeting with President Xi Jinping yielded a lot of very concrete political and economic results – of course, only where the Chinese side, according to him, agreed with him. He does not mention the Taiwan issue, but Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says that it did not feature prominently in their talks and that the US policy on Taiwan has not changed. Then go to China Daily – or Global Times – and you will see that for the Chinese it is framework, principles, structure of cooperation etc. that matters – all embedded in the overall idea of “constructive bilateral relationship of strategic stability.” Nowhere is any concrete agreement or deal – all that Trump refers to – mentioned. At the general level, this gives you insights into the very different social...
Lena Petrova of “World Affairs In Context” with more than half a million subscribers on YouTube wanted to explore what a peace researcher like me has to say about, among other things, the First and the Second Cold War and why eethics has disappeared from politics. I am particularly happy about this conversation that also yielded an amazing number of very appreciative comments on YouTube. No doubt, people are longing for alternatives, including peace perspectives.
The MIMAC – Military-Industrial-Media-Academic Complex – drives the world’s rampant militarism and wars without end. Here is a short reflection of how it works against all interests of humanity. #5 deals with why there is no real enemy or threat images/analysis. It’s all ex-post constructions. And, btw, theTFF Peace Pulse is now on Rumble.

TFF on Substack

Discover more from TFF Transnational Foundation & Jan Oberg.

Most Popular

Jan Oberg May 15, 2026 Go to this Fox News page and scroll the whole way down: President Donald Trump tells the world that his meeting with President Xi Jinping yielded a lot of very concrete political and economic results – of course, only where the Chinese side, according to him, agreed with him. He does not mention the Taiwan issue, but Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says that it did not feature prominently in their talks and that the US policy on Taiwan has not changed. Then go to China Daily – or Global Times – and you will see that for the Chinese it is framework, principles, structure of cooperation etc. that matters – all embedded in the overall idea of “constructive bilateral relationship of strategic stability.” Nowhere is any concrete agreement or deal – all that Trump refers to – mentioned. At the general level, this gives you insights into the very different social...
Lena Petrova of “World Affairs In Context” with more than half a million subscribers on YouTube wanted to explore what a peace researcher like me has to say about, among other things, the First and the Second Cold War and why eethics has disappeared from politics. I am particularly happy about this conversation that also yielded an amazing number of very appreciative comments on YouTube. No doubt, people are longing for alternatives, including peace perspectives.
The MIMAC – Military-Industrial-Media-Academic Complex – drives the world’s rampant militarism and wars without end. Here is a short reflection of how it works against all interests of humanity. #5 deals with why there is no real enemy or threat images/analysis. It’s all ex-post constructions. And, btw, theTFF Peace Pulse is now on Rumble.
Read More
Screenshot-2026-05-15-103534
Jan Oberg May 15, 2026 Go to this Fox News page and scroll the whole way down: President Donald Trump tells the world that his meeting with President Xi Jinping yielded a lot of very concrete political and economic results – of course, only where the Chinese side, according to him, agreed with him. He does not mention the Taiwan issue, but Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says that it did not feature prominently in their talks and that the US policy on Taiwan has not changed. Then go to China Daily – or Global Times – and you will see that for the Chinese it is framework, principles, structure of cooperation etc. that matters – all embedded in the overall idea of “constructive bilateral relationship of strategic stability.” Nowhere is any concrete agreement or deal – all that Trump refers to – mentioned. At the general level, this gives you insights into the very different social...
Screenshot-2026-05-12-104023
Lena Petrova of “World Affairs In Context” with more than half a million subscribers on YouTube wanted to explore what a peace researcher like me has to say about, among other things, the First and the Second Cold War and why eethics has disappeared from politics. I am particularly happy about this conversation that also yielded an amazing number of very appreciative comments on YouTube. No doubt, people are longing for alternatives, including peace perspectives.
Screenshot-2026-04-13-154551 (2)
The MIMAC – Military-Industrial-Media-Academic Complex – drives the world’s rampant militarism and wars without end. Here is a short reflection of how it works against all interests of humanity. #5 deals with why there is no real enemy or threat images/analysis. It’s all ex-post constructions. And, btw, theTFF Peace Pulse is now on Rumble.
Screenshot-2026-04-13-154551 (1)
Jan Oberg, TFF director April 28, 2026 In this third TFF Peace Pulse, I make the important distinction between the violence and the conflict that violence is a symptom of. If you want peace, focus on the underlying conflict because that is the key to resolution, peacemaking, and a better future for the parties. The West is obsessed with violence, just look around you – and 90+ per cent of the public debate is about military issues and other violence – totally wasted for peace. These Peace Pulses will only be published here a few times. You will also not find them on YouTube and Vimeo because both platforms have blocked TFF and me; you know, peace is dangerous these days. Most TFF’s videos since 2007 are now on Rumble.
Screenshot-2026-04-13-154551
In contrast to most, we’ll bring alternatives, solutions, hope and strategies for a better future. Times are dangerous, yes, but that only intensifies the need for constructive thinking and action! Jan Oberg, TFF director April 13, 2026 The new TFF Peace Pulse uses video messages in a new way: Max 3-5-minute-long comments, ideas or perhaps mini-lectures, all about peace – positive peace. We launch them today on April 13, 2026 with a carefully crafted visual aesthetic fitting the content. We hope to publish them regularly from now on. We launch Peace Pulse (PP) – for a number of reasons. The world is in chaos, and there are countless reasons to feel concerned, frustrated, even angry. The atmosphere is saturated with doom and gloom, with negative energy and rear‑mirror thinking, while vision, imagination, alternatives, strategies and genuine future‑mindedness remain in short supply. And without them, we simply can’t save the world. Looking at problems from a hundred angles will...
IMG_5165 (1)
PART II — Publishing Peace in a System That Prioritises Militarism Jan Oberg, TFF director April 10, 2026 How TFF Maintains a Daily Voice in a Digital World Built for Noise This article is part of the series “TFF at 40″ and it invites you to learn about Four Decades of Publishing Peace. It takes a look at how a small, people‑financed peace foundation has communicated across four generations of technology — from wax stencils and fax machines to mass email and Substack — and why TFF continues to publish every single day in a system that rewards noise, conflict, and militarism. ◆ What it means to publish peace every single day in a digital system built for 24/7 news and other noise, confrontation, and militarism. How TFF’s independence, continuity, and global readership defy algorithms, donor cycles, and Western media censorhip — and why the Majority World keeps listening. When the...