ReportWire

Tag: NATO member

  • News Analysis: NATO has survived plenty over 75 years. Could Trump’s Greenland threats end that?

    The crisis touched off by President Trump’s demand to take ownership of Greenland appears over, at least for now. But the United States and its European allies still face a larger long-term challenge: Can their shaky marriage be saved?

    At 75 years old, NATO has survived storms before, from squabbles over trade to estrangement over wars in Vietnam and Iraq. France, jealous of its independence, even pulled its armed forces out of NATO for 43 years.

    But diplomats and foreign policy scholars warn that the current division in the alliance may be worse, because Trump’s threats on Greenland convinced many Europeans that the United States has become an unreliable and perhaps even dangerous ally.

    The roots of the crisis lie in the president’s frequently expressed disdain for alliances in general and NATO in particular.

    Long before Trump arrived in the White House, presidents from both parties complained that many NATO countries weren’t pulling their weight in military spending.

    But earlier presidents still considered the alliance an essential asset to U.S. foreign policy and the cornerstone of a system that prevented war in Europe for most of a century.

    Trump has never seemed to share that view. Even after he succeeded in persuading NATO members to increase their defense spending, he continued to deride most allies as freeloaders.

    Until last year, he refused to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to help defend other NATO countries, the core principle of the alliance. And he reserved the right to walk away from any agreement, military or commercial, whenever it suited his purpose.

    In the two-week standoff over Greenland, he threatened to seize the island from NATO member Denmark by force, an action that would have violated the NATO treaty.

    When Britain, Germany and other countries sent troops to Greenland, he threatened to hit them with new tariffs, which would have violated a trade deal Trump made only last year.

    Both threats touched off fury in Europe, where governments had spent most of the past year making concessions to Trump on both military spending and tariffs. When Trump backed down, the lesson some leaders drew was that pushing back worked better than playing nice.

    “We do prefer respect to bullies,” French President Emmanuel Macron said.

    “Being a happy vassal is one thing. Being a miserable slave is something else,” Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever said.

    The long-term danger for the United States, scholars said, is that Europeans might choose to look elsewhere for military and economic partners.

    “They just don’t trust us,” said Richard N. Haass, a former top State Department official in the George W. Bush administration.

    “A post-American world is fast emerging, one brought about in large part by the United States taking the lead in dismantling the international order that this country built,” he wrote last week.

    Some European leaders, including Macron, have argued that they need to disentangle from the United States, build military forces that can defend against Russia, and seek more reliable trade partners, potentially including India and China.

    But decoupling from the United States would not be easy, fast or cheap. Europe and Canada still depend on the United States for many of their defense needs and as a major market for exports.

    Almost all NATO countries have pledged to increase defense spending to 5% of gross domestic product, but they aren’t scheduled to reach that goal until 2035.

    Meanwhile, they face the current danger of an expansionist Russia on their eastern frontier.

    Not surprisingly for a group of 30 countries, Europe’s NATO members aren’t united on the question. Macron has argued for more autonomy, but others have called for caution.

    “Despite all the frustration and anger of recent months, let us not be too quick to write off the transatlantic partnership,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said at Davos.

    “I think we are actually in the process of creating a stronger NATO,” said Finnish President Alexander Stubb. “As long as we keep doing that, slowly and surely we’ll be just fine.”

    They argue, in effect, that the best strategy is to muddle through — which is what NATO and Europe have done in most earlier crises.

    The strongest argument for that course may be the uncertainty and disorder that would follow a rapid erosion — or worse, dissolution — of an alliance that has helped keep its members safe for most of a century.

    The costs of that outcome, historian Robert Kagan warned recently, would be borne by Americans as well as Europeans.

    If the United States continues to weaken its commitments to NATO and other alliances, he wrote in the Atlantic, “The U.S. will have no reliable friends or allies, and will have to depend entirely on its own strength to survive and prosper. This will require more military spending, not less. … If Americans thought defending the liberal world order was too expensive, wait until they start paying for what comes next.”

    Doyle McManus

    Source link

  • Estonian foreign minister expects further Russian provocations

    NATO reacted appropriately to Russia’s recent violations of Estonia’s airspace but should expect further disruptive actions from Moscow, according to the Baltic country’s foreign minister.

    “I’m really sure that Russia will continue these provocations. It’s not about Estonia, it’s about NATO unity, as well as testing our capabilities, to also trans-Atlantic unity,” Margus Tsahkna told dpa on Friday on the sidelines of the Tallinn Digital Summit.

    In September, three Russian fighter jets entered the airspace of the EU and NATO member state for about 12 minutes.

    The government in Tallinn requested an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council and consultations with its allies under Article 4 of the NATO Treaty.

    In a subsequent statement, the military alliance warned Russia against further border violations, threatening the use of force.

    “We reacted, I think, in a very solid way,” said Tsahkna, adding that NATO had shown that it functions well, including through the immediate interception of the Russian aircraft.

    “Everything was under control. There was no immediate direct military threat.”

    Even after the incident, the alliance showed political unity and determination, he noted.

    Estonia’s foreign minister joined Latvia and Lithuania in calling for NATO’s mission to monitor Baltic airspace to be converted into a genuine defence operation.

    “We are supporting this idea,” said Tsahkna, while stressing that it is not enough to simply change the mission’s name.

    Rather, it must be upgraded with improved air-defence capabilities, according to the minister.

    The governments in Riga and Vilnius had previously spoken out in favour of transforming NATO’s Baltic Air Policing Mission into an Air Defence Mission.

    Under the joint mission implemented in 2004, NATO allies take turns providing fighter jets and personnel for armed protection flights.

    The three Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, which border Russia, do not have suitable aircraft of their own for the task.

    Source link

  • Poland says it shot down Russian drones after airspace violation

    At least three Russian drones were shot down by Nato and Polish aircraft in Poland’s airspace during overnight attacks on Ukraine, the Polish prime minister has said.

    Donald Tusk told MPs that Poland had recorded 19 drone incursions, with some flying deep enough to temporarily close four airports, including Warsaw’s main hub Chopin.

    Jets were scrambled in response to what Tusk described as a “provocation”.

    The incident marks the first time Russian drones have been shot down over the territory of a Nato member since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Russia declined to comment, while Ukraine’s foreign minister said the incident showed “Putin continues to escalate, expands the war”.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow: “We wouldn’t like to comment on this. This is not for us to do so. It’s the prerogative of the Defence Ministry [to answer].”

    Russia’s temporary charge d’affaires in Poland said Warsaw had not provided evidence that the drones were of Russian origin.

    Polish authorities have no information suggesting anyone was injured or died “as a result of the Russian action”, Tusk told Poland’s Parliament.

    “The fact that these drones, which posed a security threat, were shot down changes the political situation,” he said.

    “I have no reason to claim we’re on the brink of war, but a line has been crossed, and it’s incomparably more dangerous than before. This situation brings us the closest we have been to open conflict since World War Two”.

    Tusk said three – or perhaps four – drones were shot down overnight.

    Separately, an interior ministry spokeswoman said authorities found seven drones and the remains of an unidentified object in sites across the country.

    Karolina Galecka told a news conference that five of the drones and the remains of the unidentified object were found in different locations in Lublin province in eastern Poland, bordering Belarus and Ukraine.

    Two of the drones were discovered in central and northern Poland, much further from the borders, she said.

    One was discovered in a field in Mniszków, in Łódź province in central Poland, about 250 km (155 miles) from the Belarusian border. Another was discovered near the city of Elbląg in northern Poland.

    [BBC]

    Tusk, who convened an emergency meeting on Wednesday morning, has asked to invoke article 4 of the Nato treaty, which formally starts urgent talks between members of the alliance.

    Poland is a member state of Nato – which ties the US and many European nations together on collective defence.

    Both Tusk and Polish President Karol Nawrocki have said they are in “regular contact” with Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte, who praised a “very successful reaction” by the alliance.

    “The security of our homeland is our highest priority and requires close cooperation,” President Nawrocki said on X.

    Rutte added that the situation is being investigated, as he condemned Russia’s “reckless behaviour”, irrespective of whether it was deliberate.

    Belarus, a close Russian ally, claimed the drones entered Polish airspace accidentally after their navigation systems were jammed.

    Prime Minister Donald Tusk speaks during an extraordinary government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister in Warsaw. Behind him are the flags of Poland and the European Union

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk says Poland is at its closest to open conflict than at any time since World War Two. [EPA/Shutterstock]

    Overnight, the Operational Command of the Polish Armed Forces said the drones were tracked by radar by both Polish and Nato aircraft stationed in the country.

    The military said: “As a result of the attack by the Russian Federation on Ukrainian territory, there was an unprecedented violation of Polish airspace by drone-type objects.

    “Searches and efforts to locate the potential crash sites of these objects are ongoing.”

    Although Poland’s military operation has ended, it urged people to stay at home, naming Podlaskie, Mazowieckie, and Lublin regions as most at risk.

    “With the safety of citizens in mind, we urge that in the event of observing an unknown object or its debris, do not approach, touch, or move it,” the military wrote on X.

    “Such elements may pose a threat and contain hazardous materials. They must be thoroughly inspected by the appropriate services.”

    The Polish military also thanked Nato’s Air Command and the Netherlands for deploying F35 fighter jets.

    General Wieslaw Kukula, chief of the General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces arrives for an extraordinary government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister

    Polish military’s Gen Wieslaw Kukula attends an emergency meeting with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk [Reuters]

    Flight operations were suspended for hours at Warsaw’s Chopin and Modlin airports, as well as at Rzeszów–Jasionka and Lublin.

    A number of flights which had been due to land at Chopin airport were diverted to Gdansk, Katowice, Wroclaw, Poznan and Copenhagen.

    After airspace over the the capital was re-opened, Chopin airport said disruptions and delays may last throughout the day and warned passengers to expect delays.

    Passengers check their delayed flights on monitors at the international airport in Warsaw

    Passengers check their delayed flights on monitors at the international airport in Warsaw [AFP via Getty Images]

    The Russian drones that entered Poland were part of the latest major aerial attack on Ukraine.

    In total, Ukraine’s air force reported more than 400 drones and 42 cruise missiles were launched just before midnight and the bombardment lasted throughout the night.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky warned the latest attack was “an extremely dangerous precedent for Europe”.

    Writing on Telegram, Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Putin is “testing the West”.

    “The longer he faces no strength in response, the more aggressive he gets.

    “A weak response now will provoke Russia even more — and then Russian missiles and drones will fly even further into Europe.”

    Source link

  • Swastikas still linger on some flags in Finland’s air force, but are on the way out

    GENEVA (AP) — The air force of NATO member Finland is still flying swastikas on some flags, but is moving to remove them mostly because of the awkwardness it creates with its Western allies.

    The history of the Finnish air force’s use of the swastika, which since the 20th century has largely been associated with Nazi tyranny and hate groups, is more complex than at first appearance. It is an ancient symbol and Finland’s air force began using it many years before the birth of Nazi Germany.

    Change has been underway for years. A swastika logo was quietly pulled off the Air Force Command’s unit emblem a few years ago. But swastikas have remained on some Finnish air force flags, raising eyebrows among NATO allies, tourists and other foreigners who spot them at military events.

    “We could have continued with this flag, but sometimes awkward situations can arise with foreign visitors. It may be wise to live with the times, Col. Tomi Böhm, the new head of Karelia Air Wing air defense force, was quoted as saying in a report Thursday by the public broadcaster YLE.

    A bad look for a new NATO member

    The Defense Forces, in an email to The Associated Press on Friday, said a plan to renew the air force unit flags was launched in 2023, the year Finland joined NATO, but said it was not linked to joining the alliance. The aim, it said, was “to update the symbolism and emblems of the flags to better reflect the current identity of the Air Force.”

    It referred to an article in daily Helsingin Sanomat on Friday, which said the reason for the removal was a perception that the swastika has been an “embarrassing symbol in international contexts.”

    Finland, which shares a long border with Russia, joined NATO in April 2023 over concerns related to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Teivo Teivanen, a professor of world politics at the University of Helsinki, said the flags in question were introduced in the 1950s and today are flown by four Air Force units.

    The Air Force and the Finnish public generally had for years insisted the swastikas used in Finland’s air force “have nothing to do with the Nazi swastika,” said Teivanen, who this month had a book published whose Finnish title translates as “History of the Swastika.”

    But now, following Finland’s integration with NATO, policymakers have decided “there’s now a need to get more integrated with the forces of countries like Germany, the Netherlands, and France — countries where the swastika is clearly a negative symbol,” he said.

    Teivanen said that in 2021, German air force units bowed out of a final ceremony following exercises at a military base in Finland’s Lapland region after learning that the Finnish swastikas would be on display.

    A symbol used for more than a century

    Finland’s air force adopted the swastika emblem in 1918 soon after country gained its independence after more than a century of Imperial Russia rule.

    Count Eric von Rosen of neighboring Sweden donated Finland’s first military plane in 1918, which bore his personal symbol, the swastika.

    The Finnish air force soon after adopted a blue swastika on a white background as the national insignia on all its planes from 1918 to 1945. After the war, the imagery remained for decades on some Air Force unit flags and decorations as well as on the insignia of the Air Force Academy.

    But that doesn’t mean there is no Nazi connection at all.

    Von Rosen, an upper-class explorer and ethnographer, was the brother-in-law of Hermann Goering, a decorated World War I German fighter pilot who became an early Nazi Party member. Goering went on to lead Germany’s Luftwaffe during World War II under Hitler.

    The Finnish air force stressed that its use of the symbol had no connection to Nazi Germany, although Finland entered into a reluctant alliance with the Third Reich during World War II.

    New flags — featuring an eagle — will be published when the work has been completed and the flags are introduced into use for events like parades and local ceremonies, the Defense Forces said, without saying when that would happen.

    “The traditional Von Rosen swastika emblem, in use since 1918, has already been removed from most other Air Force emblems during earlier reforms, so its removal from the unit flags is a logical continuation of this work,” the emailed statement said.

    Source link