Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Vice president: U.S. ‘ironclad’ in defense of NATO

Harris visits allied Romania Friday

- By Aamer Madhani and Chris Megerian

BUCHAREST, Romania — Vice President Kamala Harris said Friday that Washington’s dedication to the collective defense of NATO is “ironclad” as she visited allied Romania, which has experience­d a flood of refugees from neighborin­g Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion there.

“We take seriously, and are prepared to act on, the words we speak when we say, ‘An attack on one is an attack against all,’ ” Ms. Harris said during a news conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis.

Ms. Harris also thanked Romania, a Balkan country of 19 million residents, for welcoming tens of thousands of displaced people from Ukraine as of earlier this week. The Ukrainian refugee crisis is expected to only become more challengin­g in the days and weeks ahead, and Ms. Harris said the Romanian people have been “extraordin­ary in the generosity and the courage you have shown in this moment.”

She warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown “no signs of engaging in serious diplomacy” to end the war in Ukraine. And she reiterated that Americans should be prepared to endure higher gas prices as the U.S. and its allies punish Russia, a major global oil supplier, with economic sanctions for the invasion.

“There is a price to pay for democracy. Gotta stand with your friends,” Ms. Harris said, adding that “sometimes it’s difficult, often it ain’t easy.”

Mr. Iohannis said he would increase his country’s defense spending from 2% to 2.5% of its gross domestic product, or GDP, the latest example of European nations investing more in national security amid Russian aggression.

He also said that NATO needs to “fundamenta­lly rethink” its approach to its eastern flank, and he spoke with Ms. Harris about enhancing the alliance’s presence there.

“NATO will act without hesitation to defend each and every allied state, including, obviously, Romania,” Iohannis said. “It is a scenario that all of us want to avoid.”

Ms. Harris’ talks in Bucharest with Iohannis came after she spent Thursday in Poland, which has already welcomed some 1.5 million Ukrainians since the invasion began last month. She met in Warsaw with Polish President Andrzej Duda and Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Ukrainian refugees, and others in hopes of getting a fuller picture of the unfolding humanitari­an crisis.

Ms. Harris told Mr. Iohannis soon after arriving in Bucharest that she sought to “reaffirm our commitment to this partnershi­p and also to the NATO alliance as a whole.”

The southeaste­rn European country of Romania had taken in more than 84,000 displaced people as of Tuesday, according to United Nations data. Other countries on NATO’s eastern flank, including Hungary, Moldova and Slovakia, have also welcomed tens of thousands of refugees.

Ms. Harris said the U.S. was “absolutely prepared” to support those “who understand the moral obligation we should feel to help people who are fleeing harm and seeking refuge; the burden we should all be prepared to take on to support those people who are fleeing their home when they don’t want to leave.”

Mr. Duda, in a news conference with Ms. Harris, said Polish leaders are “aware that the problem is growing, and that this problem is increasing.”

“We have to somehow handle it, and we do not have the experience,” he said.

 ?? Daniel Mihailescu/AFP via Getty Images ?? Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a Friday news conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis at Cotroceni Palace, the Romanian presidency headquarte­rs, in Bucharest.
Daniel Mihailescu/AFP via Getty Images Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a Friday news conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis at Cotroceni Palace, the Romanian presidency headquarte­rs, in Bucharest.

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