You're reading: Russia’s NATO envoy says US wants to divide and rule

MOSCOW (AP) – Russia’s ambassador to NATO suggested Sunday that Kosovo’s split from Serbia was the result of an imperialistic American effort to “divide and rule.”

In heated remarks in a televised interview, Dmitry Rogozin also reiterated Russia’s warning that Western recognition of Kosovo could encourage separatism worldwide, using Germany’s large ethnic Turkish population as an example.

Ethnic Turks in Berlin might one day ask: “Why should we not create our own – not Kosovo but Berlinosovo, Abrikosovo, Kokosovo and so forth,” said Rogozin, a former lawmaker and nationalist political party leader, apparently referring to the name of the German capital and to apricots and coconuts.

“It’s the atomization of the world,” Rogozin said on state-run Vesti-24 television. “Who benefits from this? Only those who prefer to divide and rule – the old imperial principle. This is first of all the United States of America.”

By recognizing Kosovo over the opposition of Serbia and without U.N. approval, Rogozin said, Western nations were replacing international law with a system in which “there will be only one rule: he who has brute physical power is strong and is right.”

Russia, he stressed, must maintain a strong military to ensure its security.

But, he said “We do not intend to interfere in some military, forceful way in a hot spot far from our borders,” Rogozin said. The developments there do not constitute “direct attacks on Russia, direct attacks on our national interests,” he said.

Instead, he said, “We will use to the maximum our political and moral authority – the absolute authority that we have in the Balkans, including in Serbia, to defend our truth. And this truth will bring onto our side many states that think not only about today but about the future.”

Rogozin also alleged that Kosovo’s independence declaration was supported by a powerful narcotics mafia. He said there were “shadowy structures that stand behind Kosovo’s independence. This is first of all a ‘narcomafia’ that long ago turned Kosovo into … a gigantic laboratory for the production of heroin and cocaine for all the countries of Europe.”