Russian President Vladimir Putin may take the opposite from what he is haggling over, as NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg recently proposed plans for a permanent Allied presence on the east side in response to the 46-day invasion of Ukraine on Sunday.
“What we are seeing now is a new reality, a new normal for European security. Therefore, we have asked our military commanders to provide options for what we call a resumption, a longer-term NATO adjustment,” Stoltenberg was quoted as saying. . he said in a recent interview with The Telegraph. “I expect NATO leaders to make decisions on this when they meet in Madrid at the NATO summit in June.”
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Stoltenberg explained that NATO received a “wake-up call” in 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea and at the time implemented the largest alliance boost since the end of the Cold War. In light of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24, the alliance, born of the 1949 North Atlantic Treaty between the United States, Canada and European nations, is shifting from reinforcement to a full “resumption.” Since then, NATO has deployed an additional 40,000 troops on the eastern side from the Baltic to the Black Sea.
Prior to the end of February, NATO’s presence on the eastern border was more of a “travel deterrent” intended to symbolize the alliance’s commitment to defending itself against Russian aggression. Part of the “reset” will be to “prevent by refusing to defend” against a possible invasion of the alliance. NATO is “in the midst of a very fundamental transformation” to reflect the “long-term consequences” of Putin’s actions, said Stoltenberg, who extended his term as head of the alliance by one year.
“Regardless of when, how the war in Ukraine ends, the war has already had long-term consequences for our security. NATO needs to adapt to this new reality. And that is exactly what we are doing,” he told the Telegraph. “NATO is the most successful alliance in history for two reasons. One is that we have managed to unite Europe and North America. The other is that we were able to change when the world is changing. “Now the world is changing and NATO is changing.”
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Amid concerns that Russia and China are working closely together, Stoltenberg said NATO is completing a new strategic idea to hold Beijing to the world’s second-largest defense budget.
China’s rise and “change in the global balance of power” has “direct consequences for NATO,” Stoltenberg added, explaining how China has invested heavily in new modern nuclear capabilities and long-range missiles that can reach NATO. .