Tag: NATO

  • NATO summit to focus on Afghan conflict

    NATO leaders plan to turn their attentions to the conflict in Afghanistan, on the second day of a summit so far dominated by demands from United States President, Donald Trump.

    Mr. Trump on Wednesday urged NATO allies to commit 4 per cent of their annual output (GDP) to military spending.

    He also singled out Germany for criticism over its defence spending.

    The BBC reports that NATO leaders are hoping for a more conciliatory tone on Thursday before Mr. Trump leaves for the United Kingdom.

    In early-morning tweets from Brussels, the U.S president resumed his criticism.

    He said: “The U.S. pays tens of Billions of Dollars too much to subsidize Europe, and loses Big on Trade!”

    European Union figures suggest Russia is responsible for between 50 per cent and 75 per cent of Germany’s gas imports, but gas makes up less than 20 per cent of Germany’s energy mix for power production.

    Afghanistan’s President, Ashraf Ghani, will be present for the second day of talks, and NATO’s Secretary-General, Jens Stoltenberg, hopes the bloc will agree to fund Afghan security forces until 2024.

    Britain’s Prime Minister, Theresa May, has already confirmed that the UK will send 440 more troops to serve in non-combat roles in Afghanistan.

  • EU chief warns Trump to appreciate NATO allies

    United States President, Donald Trump, is set to meet other NATO leaders for potentially fractious talks at a summit in Brussels shortly.

    Ahead of his visit, Mr. Trump hit out at the European Union on trade and at his NATO allies for failing to spend enough on defence, the BBC reports.

    He was met with a sharp rebuke from European Council President, Donald Tusk, who accused the U.S President of criticising Europe “almost daily.”

    “Dear America, appreciate your allies, after all you don’t have that many.”

    Mr. Tusk added that the EU spent more than Russia on defence, and as much as China.

    He said the U.S did not and would not have a better ally than the EU, reminding the President that European troops had also fought and died in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the US.

    For his part, President Trump predicted that the NATO meeting could be harder than his summit with the Russian leader, Vladimir Putin, in Finland next Monday.

  • Suicide attacker targets U.S. embassy in Montenegro

    Suicide attacker targets U.S. embassy in Montenegro

    An attacker threw an explosive device at the U.S. embassy in the Montenegrin capital Podgorica on Thursday morning and subsequently blew himself up with another bomb, the Montenegrin government said.

    Both devices were probably hand grenades, the first thrown into the embassy yard and the second, who killed the attacker in the street outside, the government, said on Twitter.

    According to the government, the blasts occurred at 1.30 a.m. (23:30 GMT), adding that the police are investigating the incident.

    An embassy spokesman, Jeff Adler, told the Vijesti news website that it was checking the security status of its staff and cooperating with police to identify the attacker.

    Read Also: Djokovic weds Jelena in private ceremony in Montenegro

    The embassy also posted an alert on its website advising U.S. citizens of “an active security situation” and to avoid the embassy until further notice and “employ security practices”.

    The smallest former Yugoslav republic with just 620,000 inhabitants and the last to split from Serbia, in 2006, Montenegro joined NATO in 2017, severing traditionally close ties with Russia.

    On the day of parliamentary elections in October 2016, the authorities arrested a group of people it accused of planning a coup in conspiracy with Russia.

    Moscow dismissed the allegations as absurd and counter-accused the Podgorica government of inventing the plot in order to alienate Russia.

    NAN

  • Turkey warns citizens traveling to U. S. of arbitrary arrest

    Turkey warns citizens traveling to U. S. of arbitrary arrest

    Turkey on Friday warned its citizens against travel to the U.S., saying Turks face the risk of arbitrary arrest and should take precautions if they do decide to travel.

    The comments from the Turkish Foreign Ministry come after the U.S. Department of State this week made a similar warning to its citizens, saying Americans planning to visit Turkey should reconsider plans due to “terrorism and arbitrary detentions”.

    Ties between Ankara and Washington, both NATO allies and members of the coalition against Islamic State, have been strained by the U.S. arrest and conviction of a Turkish banker in an Iran sanctions-busting case, a trial Turkey has dismissed as politically motivated.

    “Turkish citizens traveling to the United States may be subjected to arbitrary detentions based on testimonies of unrespected sources,” the ministry said in a statement.

    Read also: Turkey detains 201 IS members planning New Year attacks

    Ankara has said that the case against the banker was based on false evidence and supported by the network of the cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom it blames for orchestrating a failed coup in 2016.

    Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the U.S. since 1999, has denied the charges and condemned the coup.

    The travel warning updates come after the U.S. and Turkey lifted all visa restrictions against each other in late December, ending a months-long visa dispute that began when Washington suspended visa services at its Turkish missions after two local employees of the U.S. consulate were detained on suspicion of links to the coup.

    NAN

  • NATO Secretary General welcomes U.S. approach to Afghanistan

    NATO Secretary General welcomes U.S. approach to Afghanistan

    NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Tuesday welcomed the new strategy announced by U.S. President Donald Trump for Afghanistan and South Asia, noting that NATO remained “fully committed” to Afghanistan.

    “I welcome President Trump’s new conditions-based approach to Afghanistan and the region.

    “NATO allies and partners have already committed to increasing our presence in Afghanistan,” Stoltenberg said in a statement.

    The NATO chief called on the people of Afghanistan to work toward a political settlement and urged countries in the region “to do their utmost to shut down sanctuaries for extremist groups”.

    “Our aim remains to ensure that Afghanistan never again becomes a safe haven for terrorists who would attack our own countries.

    “NATO has 12,000 troops in Afghanistan, and 15 countries have pledged more,’’ Stoltenberg said.

  • G7 leaders brace for clash with Trump on trade, climate

    G7 leaders brace for clash with Trump on trade, climate

    Leaders of the world’s rich nations braced for contentious talks with Donald Trump at a G7 summit in Sicily on Friday after the U.S. president lambasted NATO allies for not spending more on defense and accused Germany of “very bad” trade policies.

    Trump’s confrontational remarks in Brussels, on the eve of the two-day summit in the Mediterranean resort town of Taormina, cast a pall over a meeting at which America’s partners had hoped to coax him into softening his stances on trade and climate change.

    The summit will kick off with a ceremony at an ancient Greek theater perched on a cliff overlooking the sea, before the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the U.S. begin talks on terrorism, Syria, North Korea and the global economy.

    “We will have a very robust discussion on trade and we will be talking about what free and open means,” White House economic adviser Gary Cohn told reporters late Thursday.

    He also predicted “fairly robust” talks on whether Trump should honor a U.S. commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions under the 2015 Paris Agreement.

    Trump, who dismissed man-made global warming a “hoax” during his election campaign, is not expected to decide at the summit whether he will stick with the Paris deal, negotiated under his predecessor Barack Obama.

    Even if a decision is not forthcoming, European leaders have signaled that they will push Trump hard on the Paris emissions deal, which has comprehensive support across the continent.

    “This is the first real opportunity that the international community has to force the American administration to begin to show its hand, particularly on environment policy,” said Tristen Naylor, a lecturer on development at the University of Oxford and deputy director of the G20 Research Group.

    The summit, being held near Europe’s most active volcano, Mount Etna, is the final leg of a nine-day tour for Trump, his first foreign trip since becoming president, that started in the Middle East.

    On Thursday in Brussels, with NATO leaders standing alongside him, he accused members of the military alliance of owing “massive amounts of money” to the U.S. and NATO, even though allied contributions are voluntary.

    According to German media reports, he also condemned Germany for “very bad” trade policies in meetings with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk, signaling that he would take steps to limit the sales of German cars in the U.S.

    EU officials declined to confirm the reports.

    Trump will not be the only G7 newcomer.

    French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni and British Prime Minister Theresa May will also be attending the elite club for the first time.

    May is expected to leave a day early, following Monday’s suicide bombing at a concert in northern England that killed 22 people and was allegedly carried out by a young Islamist militant of Libyan descent who grew up in Britain.

    Italy chose to stage the summit in Sicily to draw attention to Africa, which is 225 km from the island at its closest point across the Mediterranean.

    No fewer than half a million migrants, most from sub-Saharan Africa, have reached Italy by boat since 2014, taking advantage of the chaos in Libya to launch their perilous crossings.

    Italy is eager for wealthy nations to do much more to help develop Africa’s economy and make it more appealing for youngsters to stay in their home countries.

    The leaders of Tunisia, Ethiopia, Niger, Nigeria and Kenya will join the discussions on Saturday to say what should be done to encourage investment and innovation on their continent.

    One country that won’t be present is Russia.

    It was expelled from the group in 2014 following its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

    Trump called for improved ties with Moscow during his election campaign.

    Accusations from U.S. intelligence agencies that Russia intervened in the U.S. election to help Trump, and investigations into his campaign’s contacts with Russian officials, have hung over his four-month-old presidency and prevented him from getting too close to Moscow.

    On Thursday, the Washington Post and NBC News reported that Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner was under scrutiny by the FBI because of his meetings with Russian officials before Trump took office.

  • Trump arrives in Brussels, ahead of EU, NATO talks

    Trump arrives in Brussels, ahead of EU, NATO talks

    U.S. President

    U.S. President Donald Trump arrived in Brussels from Rome on Wednesday ahead of meeting on Thursday with other NATO leaders and the heads of European Union institutions.

    Having met Pope Francis at the Vatican earlier in the day, Trump will meet Belgium’s King Philippe and Prime Minister Charles Michel in Brussels later on Wednesday.

    This will be the fourth leg of his first foreign trip since he took office.

    Trump was harshly critical of NATO as a presidential candidate, describing the 28-member Western military alliance as “obsolete.”

    He had denounced its effectiveness in the fight against terrorism and complained that other members are not contributing enough to the NATO budget.

    He later reversed his position after meeting with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the White House in April.

    The European Union’s Defence Ministers have been meeting in Brussels to debate how to strengthen Europe’s defence and security as well as working better with and within the NATO military alliance.

    EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini had told reporters that cooperation is key.

    “Investing together, this is the best way to have an efficient European defence.

    “It’s a way of having a rational and efficient joint manner of working on defence.

    “The European Union member states need to overcome the fragmentation in this field and use all the instruments we have in our union,’’ he said.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that cooperation between NATO and the European Union “will be an important issue we will highlight when NATO leaders meet exactly one week from now in Brussels.”

    “That will be the first alliance meeting attended by U.S. President Donald Trump who is pushing for a bigger role for NATO fighting so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, something resisted by France and Germany.’’

    arrived in Brussels from Rome on Wednesday ahead of meeting on Thursday with other NATO leaders and the heads of European Union institutions.

    Having met Pope Francis at the Vatican earlier in the day, Trump will meet Belgium’s King Philippe and Prime Minister Charles Michel in Brussels later on Wednesday.

    This will be the fourth leg of his first foreign trip since he took office.

    Trump was harshly critical of NATO as a presidential candidate, describing the 28-member Western military alliance as “obsolete.”

    He had denounced its effectiveness in the fight against terrorism and complained that other members are not contributing enough to the NATO budget.

    He later reversed his position after meeting with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the White House in April.

    The European Union’s Defence Ministers have been meeting in Brussels to debate how to strengthen Europe’s defence and security as well as working better with and within the NATO military alliance.

    EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini had told reporters that cooperation is key.

    “Investing together, this is the best way to have an efficient European defence.

    “It’s a way of having a rational and efficient joint manner of working on defence.

    “The European Union member states need to overcome the fragmentation in this field and use all the instruments we have in our union,’’ he said.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that cooperation between NATO and the European Union “will be an important issue we will highlight when NATO leaders meet exactly one week from now in Brussels.”

    “That will be the first alliance meeting attended by U.S. President Donald Trump who is pushing for a bigger role for NATO fighting so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, something resisted by France and Germany.’’

  • France,Germany France to agree to NATO role against ISIS: sources

    France,Germany France to agree to NATO role against ISIS: sources

    France and Germany will agree to a U.S. plan for NATO to take a bigger role in the fight against Islamic militants at a meeting with President Donald Trump on Thursday, but insist the move is purely symbolic, four senior European diplomats said.

    The decision to allow the NATO to join the coalition against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq follows weeks of pressure on the two allies, who are wary of NATO confronting Russia in Syria and of alienating Arab countries who see NATO as pushing a pro-Western agenda.

    “NATO as an institution will join the coalition,” said one senior diplomat involved in the discussions.

    “The question is whether this just a symbolic gesture to the United States. France and Germany believe it is.”

    Flying to the NATO meeting in Brussels with Trump, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on Wednesday it would be an important step for the Organization to join the U.S.-led, 68-nation coalition.

    “I think they’re going to support NATO joining and becoming a formal member,” he said, referring to “a couple of countries that are still thinking it over” but not giving details.

    A senior French diplomat said Paris was ready to accept NATO joining, but that its role would be limited to training and intelligence, things allies were already involved in.

    “We want to ensure that momentum (in the U.S.-led coalition) is not disturbed,” the diplomat said.

    U.S. and other European officials want to show Trump, who called NATO “obsolete” because he said it was not doing enough against terrorism, that the alliance is responding.

    While Islamic State is on the verge of defeat in its Iraqi stronghold of Mosul and bracing for an assault against its de facto capital in Raqqa, Syria, U.S. officials are concerned fleeing militants could leave a vacuum that could prompt Arab tribal fighters to turn on each other to gain control.

    All 28 NATO allies are members of the coalition, but the alliance as a formal member could become more involved, contributing equipment, training and the expertise it gained leading nations against al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has also made the case for a non-combat role for the alliance in Syria and Iraq.

    “NATO joining the coalition will also provide a better platform for coordinating the activities of NATO allies in the fight against terrorism,” Stoltenberg said.

    “It sends a strong and clear message of unity in the fight against terrorism and especially in light of the terrorist attacks in Manchester,” he said.

    A suicide bomber killed 22 people, including children, in an attack on a crowded concert hall in the English city on Monday.

    Some allies including Britain were keen for NATO to do even more, for example using its AWACS surveillance planes over Syria and running command-and-control operations.

    German and French opposition means that for the moment, only one plane will watch over Syria from NATO-ally Turkey’s airspace to provide air traffic information to improve safety for planes.

    French government spokesman Christophe Castaner told reporters that President Emmanuel Macron would speak to Trump at their lunch in Brussels on Thursday and that he understood Trump’s call for a greater NATO role in Syria and Iraq.

    “The president will say that he is attentive to this (Trump’s call), but to make clear that it is not about transforming NATO into the sole strike force against Islamic State,” Castaner said. 

  • Trump, May ‘committed’ to NATO

    United States President, Donald Trump and British Prime Minister, Theresa May, have reaffirmed their commitment to the NATO alliance after White House talks.

    Mrs. May confirmed Mr. Trump was “100 per cent behind NATO” despite the President’s recent comments calling the transatlantic alliance obsolete.

    Both leaders said they would work to establish trade negotiation agreements, the BBC reports.

    Mrs. May also said Mr. Trump had accepted an invitation from the Queen for a state visit later this year.

    The prime minister added that a trade agreement between the United Kingdom and U.S was “in the national interest of both countries.”

    Although the UK cannot begin to negotiate trade deals until it leaves the European Union, Mr. Trump has said he wants a “quick” deal after that.

    When asked about Mr. Trump’s scheduled phone call with Russian President, Vladimir Putin, on Saturday, the President played down any suggestion that he would lift U.S sanctions against the Kremlin.

    “It’s very early to be talking about that,” he told reporters during a news conference.

  • U.S may abandon NATO protection – Trump

    Republican presidential candidate, Donald Trump, has said if he is elected he may abandon a guaranteed protection to fellow NATO countries.

    Speaking to the New York Times, Mr. Trump said the United States would only come to the aid of allies if they have “fulfilled their obligations to us.”

    Members of NATO have all signed a treaty that says they will come to the aid of any member that is attacked, the BBC reports.

    Mr. Trump will speak on Thursday at the Republican National Convention.

    In a preview of what he will tell convention-goers in his speech, he outlined a foreign policy strategy aimed at reducing U.S expenditure and involvement abroad.

    Asked about Russian aggression towards NATO countries in the Baltic region, Mr. Trump suggested the U.S might abandon the longstanding protections offered by the U.S to such nations.

    The Republican candidate also said that, if elected, he would not pressure U.S allies over crackdowns on political opposition and civil liberties, arguing that the U.S had to “fix our own mess” before “lecturing” other nations.

    He said: “Look at what is happening in our country. How are we going to lecture when people are shooting policemen in cold blood?”

    Asked about the failed coup in Turkey on Friday, the Republican candidate praised Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has been criticised by some Western leaders over his increasingly authoritarian rule.

    “I give great credit to him for being able to turn that around,” Mr. Trump said of the failed coup. “Some people say that it was staged, you know that,” he said. “I don’t think so.”

    U.S Secretary of State, John Kerry, has urged Mr. Erdogan to follow the rule of law, amid a crackdown on opposition figures by the Turkish leader in the wake of the coup attempt.

    But Mr. Trump chose not to make a similar statement.