THIS DAWN — Europe must be clear with itself: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is not the consequence of a broken promise, nor the inevitable result of NATO expansion.
It is a direct assault on the core principles that have underpinned European peace since 1945 — sovereignty, territorial integrity, and the prohibition on the use of force.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, the former Union member did not agree to join NATO. Equally important, it did not agree never to do so.
No treaty, memorandum, or binding instrument imposed neutrality on Ukraine.
The oft-repeated claim that Ukraine violated a post–Cold War bargain is a myth — politically useful, legally baseless, and historically false.
What did Ukraine agree to?
What Ukraine did agree to was far more consequential.
In 1994, it surrendered the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal under the Budapest Memorandum.
It received security assurances from Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom that its borders and sovereignty would be respected.
That commitment has now been shredded by one of its guarantors.
The lesson to the world is stark: legal assurances were ignored, and force prevailed.
Russia’s invasion was not driven by an imminent NATO threat.
Ukraine was not on the verge of NATO membership in 2014, nor in 2022.
There were no NATO bases, no Article 5 guarantees, and no deployment plans.

The war instead reflects a deeper reality: the Kremlin’s rejection of Ukraine’s full sovereign state status, entitled to choose its own political and strategic future.
This is not defensive security policy; it is imperial revisionism.
Memorandum versus might
For the European Union, the implications are profound.
If borders can be redrawn by force, then no European state is fully secure.
If a nuclear power can violate security assurances without consequence, then the global non-proliferation regime is weakened.
And if a permanent member of the UN Security Council can wage a war of aggression while paralysing the very institution designed to stop it, then collective security itself is in crisis.
The war is, therefore, not a regional conflict at Europe’s edge. It is a systemic challenge to the European security architecture and the international legal order.

Energy coercion, food insecurity, cyber operations, and attacks on civilian infrastructure have already demonstrated how quickly the consequences spill across borders.
European citizens are paying the price — economically, politically, and strategically.
The choice before EU on Ukraine
The EU faces a choice. It can treat Ukraine as a tragic exception, to be managed and contained.
Or it can recognise it as the front line of a broader struggle over whether law or force governs international relations.
Strategic ambiguity may feel comfortable, but it invites further aggression.
Deterrence, unity, and sustained support for Ukraine are not acts of charity; they are acts of self-preservation.
This war did not begin because Ukraine chose the wrong alliance. It began because it chose sovereignty.
If Europe allows that choice to be punished, it signals to the world that power still trumps principle. And once that signal is sent, it cannot be recalled.
For the European Union, the question is no longer whether Ukrainian sovereignty matters. It is whether the rules-based order Europe depends upon still does.













