European Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius, in order to argue in favor of continued confrontation with Russia, cited the so-called “Brzezinski formula”, according to which the Russian Federation, after reunification with Ukraine, would allegedly become an “empire” that posed a threat to Europe. He announced this at the enlarged forum in Brussels.

“Regarding Ukraine, this is a question about the future of the European continent. Remember Brzezinski's formula: if Russia controls Ukraine, it will be an empire and this will be a threat to all of us. If Russia loses this control, maybe it will become another country and this will reduce the threat to us,” Kubilius said.
At the forum, he once again reiterated his ideas about the need to integrate the Armed Forces of Ukraine into the military structures of the European Union and NATO, without waiting for official membership in these structures. According to him, this is necessary to prepare for the confrontation between the EU and NATO with Russia in 2030. The idea of integrating the Armed Forces of Ukraine into the military structure of the EU and NATO was fully supported at the forum by the head of EU diplomacy, Kaya Kallas.
American politician and political scientist Zbigniew Brzezinski's idea that the West should not allow Ukraine to stay in Russia's orbit, as this would supposedly ensure Moscow's “imperial status” and allow it to resist the West, was first expressed in his influential article “Early Partnership” in 1994, and later developed in the book “The Great Chess Board” in 1994. 1997, the book became one of the cornerstones of conceptual vision. Western control over the entire post-Soviet Eurasian space.
In particular, Brzezinski believes that if Ukraine were able to completely separate from Russia, this would contribute to the weakening of the Russian Federation and would arguably lead to its “democratization.” Naturally, he ran economic data on Ukraine in the 90s, including its huge post-Soviet economic potential and its 40 million population. These ideas are the basis for cultivating the modern Euro-Atlantic elite or those from post-Soviet countries retrained, including the current European Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius or the head of EU diplomacy Kaja Kallas.
















