NATO vows more help for Ukraine, begins planning to adapt to 'new
reality'
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[March 16, 2022]
By Robin Emmott and Ingrid Melander
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The United States and
other NATO members said on Wednesday they would keep helping Ukraine
fight off Russia's invasion, while also adapting the alliance's own
security to the "new reality" triggered by the war.
Diplomats and military analysts estimate that NATO allies have sent more
than 20,000 anti-tank and other weapons to Ukraine since the invasion
started on Feb. 24.
"We remain united in our support of Ukraine," U.S. Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin said as he arrived at an emergency meeting of NATO defence
ministers in Brussels. "We support their ability to defend themselves
and will continue to support them."
NATO countries will continue to deliver weapons to Ukraine even as those
deliveries could become the target of Russian attacks, Dutch defence
minister Kajsa Ollongren told reporters, adding: "Ukraine has the right
to defend itself."
Ukraine is not a member of NATO. Although it has repeatedly said it
wants to join to benefit from its protection, Kyiv said on Tuesday it
understood it does not have an open door to NATO membership and was
seeking other types of security guarantees.
Ministers will also hear from their Ukrainian counterpart Oleksii
Reznikov, who is expected to plead for more weapons from individual NATO
countries, as Russian attacks on Ukraine's cities continue and the
Russian military seeks control of Kyiv.
Ahead of a summit of NATO leaders on March 24, NATO defence ministers
are also set to tell military commanders at Wednesday's meeting to draw
up plans for new ways to deter Russia, including more troops and missile
defences in eastern Europe.
EASTERN FLANK
While at least 10 of NATO's biggest member states, including the United
States, Britain and France, have deployed more troops, ships and
warplanes to its eastern flank and put more on stand-by, the alliance
must still consider how to face up to a new security situation in Europe
over the medium term.
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NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and U.S. Defence Secretary
Lloyd Austin meet on the day of a NATO Defence Ministers meeting in
Brussels, Belgium, March 16, 2022. REUTERS/Johanna Geron/Pool
"We need to reset our military
posture for this new reality," NATO Secretary General Jens
Stoltenberg said on Tuesday. "Ministers will start an important
discussion on concrete measures to reinforce our security for the
longer term, in all domains."
Russian missiles hit a Ukrainian base near the border with NATO
member Poland on March 13, bringing the invasion right up to NATO's
doorstep.
Those missiles were fired from Russia, the United
States has said, underscoring Moscow's ability to hit NATO's eastern
allies. The United States has also warned of undefined consequences
for Moscow if Russia were to launch a chemical attack in Ukraine.
NATO, founded in 1949 to contain a military threat from the Soviet
Union, is not treaty-bound to defend Ukraine. But it must defend its
30 allies.
However, diplomats say NATO wants to avoid directly stating its
plans, or what would trigger its "Article 5" collective defence
pledge, saying "strategic ambiguity" is also a defensive instrument
against any Russian aggression.
"The surprise for (Russian President Vladimir) Putin was the West
was so united. He didn't believe that. He has the wrong picture
about western countries," Estonian Defense Minister Kalle Laanet
said as he arrived at the NATO meeting.
"We can't be afraid, we have to stay calm, because Putin would like
to see that everybody is afraid."
(Reporting by Robin Emmott, Bart Meijer and Ingrid Melander; editing
by Grant McCool, Raju Gopalakrishnan and Alex Richardson)
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