Moldova is trying to stay out of Russia’s war with Ukraine
An interview with Maia Sandu, the country’s pro-Western president
MAIA SANDU, Moldova’s slight, soft-spoken, pro-European president, seems a bit out of place in her country’s vast presidential palace. Originally the home of Moldova’s Supreme Soviet, it was built in the waning days of the Soviet Union to advertise the government’s authority in the second smallest of its 15 constituent republics. When the union collapsed and Moldova became independent, Russia backed a separatist rebellion in Transnistria, a mostly Russian-speaking region; up to a thousand people were killed. Russian troops remain (illegally) in the breakaway statelet, over which the Moldovan government has no control. Now Russia’s attempt to re-establish the Soviet order in Ukraine is threatening to spark fresh conflict in Moldova, already one of Europe’s poorest countries.
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The next target?”
Europe May 7th 2022
- Europe’s hard-hit east is pushing the toughest response in Ukraine
- Austria is rethinking its cosy ties with Russia
- Moldova is trying to stay out of Russia’s war with Ukraine
- Spyware in Spain targeted the prime minister and his enemies
- Odessa strives for normality despite Russia’s war
- France’s re-elected President Emmanuel Macron wants to govern differently
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