The Manila Times

NATO chief to Europe: Step up arms output

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BERLIN: The head of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) called on Europe to increase its arms production to support Ukraine and prevent “potentiall­y decades of confrontat­ion” with Moscow, in an interview published by German media on Saturday.

Ahead of a key meeting of the United States-led alliance’s defense ministers in Belgium’s capital Brussels and the second anniversar­y of the RussiaUkra­ine war, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g insisted that “we need to reconstitu­te and expand our industrial base faster, to increase deliveries to Ukraine and refill our own stocks.”

“This means shifting from slow peacetime to high-tempo conflict production,” he told the German Sunday daily Welt am Sonntag.

Stoltenber­g’s comments came amid growing pleas for shells, ammunition and other military aid from Ukraine as it battles Russian forces into a third year.

Western leaders have also called for greater assistance. Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz and US President Joe Biden urged American lawmakers on Friday to approve a long-delayed military aid package for Ukraine, warning that Kyiv could not hold off Russia’s invasion without it.

“The failure of the United States’ Congress in not supporting Ukraine is close to criminal neglect,” Biden said as he hosted Scholz in the Oval Office on Friday.

Stoltenber­g said: “There is no imminent military threat against any ally. At the same time, we hear regular threats from the Kremlin against NATO countries.”

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago has shown that “peace in Europe cannot be taken for granted,” the NATO chief said, emphasizin­g the importance of protecting countries in the alliance.

“As long as we invest in our security and we stay united, we will continue to deter any aggression,” he said.

“NATO does not seek war with Russia,

but we need to brace ourselves for potentiall­y decades of confrontat­ion,” he added. “We monitor closely what Russia does, and we have increased our presence in the eastern part of the alliance.”

“If Putin wins in Ukraine, there is no guarantee that Russian aggression will not spread further. So supporting Ukraine now and investing in NATO’s own capabiliti­es is our best defense,” Stoltenber­g said.

NATO defense ministers will meet in Brussels on February 15, one week ahead of the second anniversar­y of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. A meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group will be a key feature of the talks.

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