San Francisco Chronicle

Eastern nations seek boost in defenses from alliance

- By Stephen McGrath and Nicolae Dumitrache Stephen McGrath and Nicolae Dumitrache are Associated Press writers.

BUCHAREST, Romania — Nine NATO nations on the alliance’s eastern flank held talks in Romania ahead of a key NATO summit later this month, with some leaders urging NATO to step up protection­s for them in light of Russia’s protracted war against Ukraine.

Friday’s summit in Bucharest provided a platform for NATO’s Eastern members to discuss regional security issues and forge a united voice within the 30-member security alliance. Those attending were Romania, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.

“We need to make sure that NATO is able and prepared to respond effectivel­y and calibrated to the threats it faces,” said Romanian President Klaus Iohannis. “The alliance needs to be able to defend every inch of its territory.

“The result we are pursuing is a consolidat­ed NATO presence on the eastern flank, united and coherent, robust, credible and sustainabl­e, especially on the Black Sea — the most exposed to Russia’s threats,” Iohannis added.

Three NATO members — Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey — border the Black Sea, which has turned into a key battlegrou­nd in the war in Ukraine.

NATO is set to hold a “Strategic Concept” summit at the end of June in Madrid to reaffirm its values and purpose and to map out future goals.

Poland’s President Andrzej Duda said that “we are also counting on an increase of U.S. presence in our part of Europe” and that he wants the number of NATO troops in each eastern flank country to be increased.

“We want the enhanced forward presence that we have today on NATO’s eastern flank to be extended,” he said. “We want the existing battalion groups to be transforme­d into brigade groups.”

Duda said a brigade group has 3,000 troops, which would mean a “significan­t and visible strengthen­ing.”

After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, NATO bolstered its presence on the eastern flank by adding four multinatio­nal battle groups to Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia. It brings the total number of battle groups to eight, which stretch from the Black Sea in the south to the Baltic Sea in the north.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g joined the forum via video after contractin­g shingles. Stoltenber­g stressed the importance of continued defense spending to the eastern flank leaders and commended “the fact that many of them meet or exceed the 2% target of GDP on defense spending.”

Iohannis said he supports “strengthen­ing NATO relations with partners in the region, who are deeply exposed to Russian pressure and aggression” and expressed “firm support for NATO’s ‘Open Doors’ policy and for Sweden and Finland’s” bids to join NATO.

“The accession of these states will contribute to strengthen­ing the security of the Alliance as a whole,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States