Trump Supports NATO, But Senate Holds Up Expansion – Newsweek

In his first major speech to Congress on Tuesday, President Donald Trump assured U.S. allies that he is committed to NATO, but some of his fellow Republicans have been blocking a Senate vote to expand the alliance for months.

The delay of the Senate's consideration of Montenegro's accession to the alliance has fueled questions about whether Trump's administration and his party will stand up to Russia despite the president's desire for better relations.

Moscow opposes any further expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

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Montenegro, a former Yugoslav republic with a population of 650,000, hopes to win the approval of all 28 NATO allies in time to become a full member at a summit in May. By late February, it had been approved by 24. Members see Montenegro's accession as a way to counter Russia's efforts to expand its influence in the Balkans.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has twice voted in favor of Montenegro, first in December and again in January.

But objections by Republican Senators Rand Paul and Mike Lee have blocked a vote in the full Senate.

At a September hearing, Paul questioned the wisdom of angering Russia by allowing a tiny country that could not play a significant role in defending the United States to join the trans-Atlantic alliance.

With his image projected upon a huge screen, U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

"I think we need to think this through, and we need to have a little bit more of a debate," he said then.

On Wednesday, Paul said he still objected.

"I'm not so sure what they add to our defense. So I'm not so sure it's a great idea that somehow Montenegro's going to defend the United States," Paul told Reuters.

A spokesman for Lee said the senator objected only to the Senate considering the matter with a quick voice vote, saying he wanted a roll call so every member's position would be recorded.

Lee has not made his opinion on Montenegro's accession public, the spokesman said.

Roll Call

Asked if a roll call vote would be scheduled, a spokesman for Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he had no updates to provide. If there is a Senate vote, Montenegro's accession is expected to receive the two-thirds majority needed to pass.

Montenegrin Foreign Minister Srdjan Darmanovic told Reuters last month that he had been assured that the Senate would ratify his country's accession by May.

Trump has called for closer ties to Moscow and criticized NATO as obsolete. In his speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, he reaffirmed support for the alliance, but said he expects U.S. allies to pay more of the cost of their own security needs.

Montenegrin officials blame Moscow for an extended campaign intended to prevent the country from joining NATO. Last month, they said they had evidence Russia was involved in a plot to overthrow its government during an election last October, an accusation Moscow dismissed.

The charges echoed assertions by U.S. intelligence that Russia sought to interfere in the 2016 U.S. election.

Trump could still keep Montenegro from joining by refusing to formally deposit the country's Protocol of Accession. Doing so would signal a significant rift with his own party in Congress.

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Trump Supports NATO, But Senate Holds Up Expansion - Newsweek

Trump Says Money Is ‘Pouring’ Into NATO, But So Far It’s Barely a Trickle – Bloomberg

President Donald Trump declared victory on a key element of his international agenda when he told Congress that money is pouring in from NATO countries to support the defense alliance, leaving aides to explain the boast.

Trump said in his joint address to Congress on Tuesday evening that his administrations very strong and frank discussions are succeeding in prodding NATO allies to boost defense spending. In an aside that was one of his few departures from his prepared text, the president added, In fact I can tell you, the money is pouring in. Very nice.

Not yet. The idea that money is pouring in appears at odds with the laborious defense budget decisions made by the groups 28 member nations. White House aides said Wednesday that the progress nonetheless is real, if less immediate than the president suggested.

The response of allies to the case made by the President, the Vice President and the Secretary of Defense (among others) has been overwhelmingly positive, Michael Anton, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said Wednesday in an email. We expect to see stepped up defense spending commitments reflected in their next budget cycles.

Specifically, a White House official who asked not to be identified added that the president was referring to Latvia, Lithuania and Romania, which have outlined plans to meet NATOs target that every member spend 2 percent of its gross domestic product on defense.

During his presidential campaign, Trump at various points called the North Atlantic Treaty Organization obsolete and warned the U.S. might not honor the pledge to defend any member under attack unless other members started paying their fair share of defense costs.

NATO countries set the 2 percent target for members defense spending in 2014. While several countries have increased defense spending in recent years, few meet the 2 percent threshold. The U.S., U.K., Estonia, Poland and Greece were alone among the alliances 28 members in meeting that target last year.

The latest official figures are due soon: NATOs annual report, which will include updated details on defense spending, is scheduled to be published on March 13.

The White House official said Latvia and Lithuania agreed to reach the NATO goal by 2018 and that Romania plans to hit that level next year. The three nations have moved to bolster their defense in response to Russias seizure of Crimea and intervention in Ukraine.

The economies of those three countries are among the smallest within the NATO alliance. Together they accounted for 0.4 percent of total defense spending by NATO members in 2016, according to a report released by the alliance.

In his speech to Congress, Trump gave his strongest backing yet for NATO while also claiming victory in prodding increased defense spending.

We strongly support NATO, an alliance forged through the bonds of two World Wars that dethroned fascism, and a Cold War that defeated communism, he said. But our partners must meet their financial obligations. And now, based on our very strong and frank discussions, they are beginning to do just that.

Countries including Germany and France have boosted spending on defense, although the increases began before Trump took office. Former President Barack Obama had also prodded -- more gently -- for NATO countries to increase defense spending to meet the target.

The issue has moved up the political agenda since Trumps election victory, withNATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg saying more must be done in the coming years on fair burden-sharing.

The president of the United States and the American people expect our allies to keep their word and to do more in our common defense, and the president expects real progress by the end of 2017, Vice President Mike Pence said at the NATO headquarters in Brussels last month. It is time for actions, not words.

Navy Commander Sarah Higgins, a Defense Department spokeswoman, said in an interview Wednesday that Defense Secretary James Mattis held discussions with partners about making afair contribution during the recent NATO Defense Ministerial meeting in Brussels.

That was one of the main messages that we were trying to get across -- that we are committed to NATO but as well we need everyone to have their fair share of the commitment. And the message was well-received.

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Trump Says Money Is 'Pouring' Into NATO, But So Far It's Barely a Trickle - Bloomberg

Is Germany Serious About Defending Itself, Europe, And The West? Time For Europeans To Run NATO – Forbes


Washington Times
Is Germany Serious About Defending Itself, Europe, And The West? Time For Europeans To Run NATO
Forbes
In recent history no European nation has demonstrated greater military prowess then Germany. That competence had tragic consequences in World War II and colors Berlin's approach to the world today. However, more than seven decades after that ...
Despite Trump claims, NATO defense dollars not exactly 'pouring in' yetWashington Times
German Minister Calls Trump Demand On NATO Spending 'Unrealistic'RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
German foreign minister voices skepticism on NATO spending targetPOLITICO.eu
Benitolink: San Benito County News -Reuters -Deutsche Welle
all 37 news articles »

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Is Germany Serious About Defending Itself, Europe, And The West? Time For Europeans To Run NATO - Forbes

Trump jumps the gun on NATO, jobs claims – The Boston Globe

By Calvin Woodward and Christopher S. Rugaber Associated Press March 01, 2017

WASHINGTON President Trump boasted in his speech to Congress that new money is pouring in from NATO partners, which it isnt. He also took credit for corporate job expansion and military cost savings that actually took root under his predecessor.

A look at some of his claims Tuesday night:

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TRUMP: Speaking of the NATO alliance, Our partners must meet their financial obligations. And now, based on our very strong and frank discussions, they are beginning to do just that. In fact, I can tell you the money is pouring in. Very nice. Very nice.

THE FACTS: No new money has come pouring in from NATO allies. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis made a strong case before allied defense ministers at a NATO meeting last month, pressing them to fulfill their 2014 commitment to spend 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense by 2024. He and other leaders said the allies understood the message and there was some discussion about working out plans to meet the goal.

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Only five of the 28 member countries are meeting the 2 percent level, and no new commitments have been made since the NATO meeting.

Germanys foreign minister said Wednesday he is skeptical about his countrys plans to increase defense spending, saying it could raise concerns in Europe by turning Germany into a military supremacy. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said her country will meet its commitment to raise defense spending by the 2024 deadline. In any event, the commitment is for these nations to spend more on their own military capabilities, which would strengthen the alliance, not hand over money.

* * *

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TRUMP: According to the National Academy of Sciences, our current immigration system costs Americas taxpayers many billions of dollars a year.

THE FACTS: That report says immigrants contribute to government finances by paying taxes and add expenditures by consuming public services.

The report found that while first-generation immigrants are more expensive to governments than their native-born counterparts, primarily at the state and local level, immigrants children are among the strongest economic and fiscal contributors in the population. This second generation contributed more in taxes on a per capita basis, for example, than did the rest of the population in the period studied, 1994-2013.

The report found that the long-run fiscal impact of immigrants and their children would probably be seen as more positive if their role in sustaining labor force growth and contributing to innovation and entrepreneurial activity were taken into account.

* * *

TRUMP: Weve saved taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars by bringing down the price of the F-35 jet.

THE FACTS: The cost savings he persists in citing were secured in full or large part before he became president.

The head of the Air Force program announced significant price reductions in the contract for the Lockheed F-35 jet Dec. 19 after Trump had tweeted about the cost but weeks before he met the companys CEO about it.

Pentagon managers took action even before the election to save money on the contract. Richard Aboulafia, an analyst with the aerospace consulting firm Teal Group, said there is no evidence of any additional cost savings as a result of Trumps actions.

* * *

TRUMP: Since my election, Ford, Fiat-Chrysler, General Motors, Sprint, Softbank, Lockheed, Intel, Walmart, and many others have announced that they will invest billions of dollars in the United States and will create tens of thousands of new American jobs.

THE FACTS: Trump is taking credit for corporate jobs decisions that largely predate his election. In the case of Intel, construction of the Chandler, Ariz., factory referred to by Trump actually began during Barack Obamas presidency. The project was delayed by insufficient demand for Intels high-powered computer chips, but the company now expects to finish the factory within four years because it anticipates business growth.

Some of the job announcements have come after companies, such as the wireless carrier Sprint, reduced their numbers of workers.

More important, even as some companies create jobs, others are laying off workers. The best measure of whether more jobs are actually being created is the monthly employment report issued by the Labor Department, which nets out those gains and losses. The department will issue its report for February, the first full month of Trumps term, on March 10.

* * *

TRUMP: His budget plan will offer one of the largest increases in national defense spending in American history.

THE FACTS: Three times in recent years, Congress raised defense budgets by larger percentages than the $54 billion, or 10 percent, increase that Trump proposes. The base defense budget grew by $41 billion, or 14.3 percent, in 2002; by $37 billion, or 11.3 percent, in 2003, and by $47 billion, or 10.9 percent, in 2008, according to Defense Department figures.

* * *

TRUMP: We will provide massive tax relief for the middle class.

THE FACTS: Trump has provided little detail on how this would happen. Independent analyses of his campaigns tax proposals found that most of the benefits would flow to the wealthiest families. The richest 1 percent would see an average tax cut of nearly $215,000 a year, while the middle one-fifth of the population would get a cut of $1,010, according to the Tax Policy Center, a joint project by the Brookings Institution and Urban Institute.

* * *

TRUMP: A White House fact sheet on the nations infrastructure issued with his speech describes a desperate need for improvement of public infrastructure in poor condition. It cites a report from the American Road and Transportation Builders Association that more than 55,000 bridges are structurally deficient.

THE FACTS: Trump and many Americans love to complain about their highways and bridges, but data show that the country isnt that bad off when compared either with its global counterparts or the recent past.

The World Economic Forum ranks the United States seventh out of 138 countries for its transportation infrastructure, ahead of countries such as Germany, Spain, Canada, Britain, and China. Countries ahead of it on the list are smaller, including the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Netherlands.

By the nations own measurements, bridges have improved over the past decade or so. The trade association for road builders, using government data, indeed says there are 55,710 structurally deficient bridges those carrying more traffic than they were designed for. But that number represents a 34 percent decline since 2002. And the share of miles driven on national highways with pavement offering good ride quality rose from 50 percent in 2002 to 57 percent in 2012.

Continued here:

Trump jumps the gun on NATO, jobs claims - The Boston Globe

NATO – News: NATO Secretary General stresses value of … – NATO HQ (press release)

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg will stress the importance of the partnership between NATO and Switzerland during a two-day visit to Bern and Geneva (1-2 March 2017).

On Wednesday (1 March 2017), the Secretary General is meeting with the President of the Swiss Confederation, Ms. Doris Leuthard in Bern for talks on current security challenges and options for closer cooperation between the Alliance and Switzerland.

The Secretary General will discuss security challenges in the Middle East and North Africa at the Geneva Centre of Security Policy, where he will deliver a keynote speech on Thursday afternoon (2 March 2017). In his address, the Secretary General will make the case for the importance of projecting stability beyond NATOs borders and set out how NATO can empower local forces and build resilient institutions.

During his debut trip to Switzerland as Secretary General, Mr. Stoltenberg will hold a range of bilateral talks, including with the Federal Councillor and Head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Didier Burkhalter and the Head of the Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport, Mr. Guy Parmelin. In Geneva, the Secretary General will meet with representatives from international organisations and NGOs, including with the President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Mr. Peter Maurer.

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NATO - News: NATO Secretary General stresses value of ... - NATO HQ (press release)

How Much of a Military Threat Does Russia Pose to NATO and the US? – Scout

How would NATO hold up in an all-out war against Russia? Rand Wargame found that Russian forces could quickly overwhelm NATO forces currently protecting Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia

How much of a threat do Russia's emerging 5th-generation stealth fighter, nuclear arsenal, high-tech air defenses, anti-satellite weapons, conventional army and submarines pose to NATO and the U.S.?

Current tensions between Russia and NATO are leading many to carefully assess this question and examine the current state of weaponry and technological sophistication of the Russian military -- with a mind to better understanding the extent of the kinds of threats they may pose.

Naturally, Russias military maneuvers and annexation of the Crimean peninsula have many Pentagon analysts likely wondering about and assessing the pace of Russia's current military modernization and the relative condition of the former Cold War military giants forces, platforms and weaponry.

Russia has clearly postured itself in response to NATO as though it can counter-balance or deter the alliance, however some examinations of Russias current military reveals questions about its current ability to pose a real challenge to NATO in a prolonged, all-out military engagement.

Nevertheless, Russia continues to make military advances and many Pentagon experts and analysts have expressed concern about NATO's force posture in Eastern Europe regarding whether it is significant enough to deter Russia from a possible invasion of Eastern Europe.

Also, Russias economic pressures have not slowed the countries commitment to rapid military modernization and the increase of defense budgets, despite the fact that the countrys military is a fraction of what it was during the height of the Cold War in the 1980s.

While the former Cold War giants territories and outer most borders are sizeably less than they were in the 1980s, Russias conventional land, air and sea forces are trying to expand quickly, transition into the higher-tech information age and steadily pursue next generation platforms.

Russias conventional and nuclear arsenal is a small piece of what it was during the Cold War, yet the country is pursuing a new class of air-independent submarines, a T-50 stealth fighter jet, next-generation missiles and high-tech gear for individual ground soldiers.

A think-tank known asThe National Interesthas recently published a number of reports about the technological progress now being made by Russian military developers. The various write-ups include reporting on new Russian anti-satellite weapons, T-14 Armata tanks, air defenses and early plans for a hypersonic, 6th-generation fighter jet, among other things. Russia is unambiguously emphasizing military modernization and making substantial progress, the reports from The National Interest and other outlets indicate.

For instance, Russia hasapparently conducted a successful test launch of its Nudoldirect ascent anti-satellite missile, according to The National Interest.

"This is the second test of the new weapon, which is capable of destroying satellites in space. The weapon was apparently launched from the Plesetsk test launch facility north of Moscow," the report from The National Interest writes.

In addition, The National Interests' Dave Majumdar reported that Russian Airborne Forces plan six armored companies equipped with newly modifiedT-72B3M tanks. Over the next two years, those six companies will be expanded to battalion strength, the report states.

Russia is also reportedly developing a so-called "Terminator 3" tank support fighting vehicle.

.During the Cold War, the Russian defense budget amounted to nearly half of the countrys overall expenditures.

Now, the countries military spending draws upon a smaller percentage of its national expenditure. However, despite these huge percentage differences compared to the 1980s, the Russian defense budget is climbing again. From 2006 to 2009, the Russian defense budget jumped from $25 billion up to $50 billion according to Business Insider and the 2013 defense budget is listed elsewhere at $90 billion.

Overall, the Russian conventional military during the Cold War in terms of sheer size was likely five times what it is today.

The Russian military had roughly 766,000 active front line personnel in 2013 and as many as 2.4 million reserve forces, according toglobalfirepower.com. During the Cold War, the Russian Army had as many as three to four million members.

By the same 2013 assessment, the Russian military is listed as having more than 3,000 aircraft and 973 helicopters. On the ground, Globalfirepower.com says Russia has 15-thousand tanks, 27,000 armored fighting vehicles and nearly 6,000 self-propelled guns for artillery. While the Russian military may not have a conventional force the sheer size of its Cold War force, they have made efforts to both modernized and maintain portions of their mechanized weaponry and platforms. The Russian T-72 tank, for example, has been upgraded numerous times since its initial construction in the 1970s.

On the overall Naval front, Globalfirepower.com assesses the Russian Navy as having 352 ships, including one aircraft carrier, 13 destroyers and 63 submarines. The Black Sea is a strategically significant area for Russia in terms of economic and geopolitical considerations as it helps ensure access to the Mediterranean.

Analysts have also said that the Russian military made huge amounts of conventional and nuclear weapons in the 80s, ranging from rockets and cruise missiles to very effective air defenses.

In fact, the Russian built S-300 and S-400 anti-aircraft air defenses, if maintained and modernized, are said to be particularly effective, experts have said.

Citing Russian news reports, the National Interest reported that the Russians are now testing a new, S-500 air defense systems able to reportedly reach targets up to 125 miles.

In the air, the Russian have maintained their 1980s built Su-27 fighter jets, which have been postured throughout strategic areas by the Russian military.

Often compared to the U.S. Air Forces F-15 Eagle fighter, the Su-27 is a maneuverable twin engine fighter built in the 1980s and primarily configured for air superiority missions.

Rand Wargame

While many experts maintain that NATOs size, fire-power, air supremacy and technology would ultimately prevail in a substantial engagement with Russia, that does not necessarily negate findings from a Rand study released last year explaining that NATO would be put in a terrible predicament should Russia invade the Baltic states.

NATO force structure in Eastern Europe in recent years would be unable to withstand a Russian invasion into neighboring Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, the Rand study has concluded.

After conducting an exhaustive series of wargames wherein red (Russian) and blue (NATO) forces engaged in a wide range of war scenarios over the Baltic states, a Rand Corporation study called Reinforcing Deterrence on NATOs Eastern Flank determined that a successful NATO defense of the region would require a much larger air-ground force than what is currently deployed.

In particular, the study calls for a NATO strategy similar to the Cold War eras AirLand Battle doctrine from the 1980s. During this time, the U.S. Army stationed at least several hundred thousand troops in Europe as a strategy to deter a potential Russian invasion. Officials with U.S. Army Europe tell Scout Warrior that there are currenty 30,000 U.S. Army soldiers in Europe.

The Rand study maintains that, without a deterrent the size of at least seven brigades, fires and air support protecting Eastern Europe, that Russia cold overrun the Baltic states as quickly as in 60 hours.

As currently postured, NATO cannot successfully defend the territory of its most exposed members. Across multiple games using a wide range of expert participants in and out of uniform playing both sides, the longest it has taken Russian forces to reach the outskirts of the Estonian and/or Latvian capitals of Tallinn and Riga, respectively, is 60 hours. Such a rapid defeat would leave NATO with a limited number of options, the study writes.

AirLand Battle was a strategic warfighting concept followed by U.S. and allied forces during the Cold War which, among other things, relied upon precise coordination between a large maneuvering mechanized ground force and attack aircraft overhead. As part of the approach, air attacks would seek to weaken enemy assets supporting front line enemy troops by bombing supply elements in the rear. As part of the air-ground integration, large conventional ground forces could then more easily advance through defended enemy front line areas.

A rapid assault on the Baltic region would leave NATO with few attractive options, including a massive risky counterattack, threatening a nuclear weapons option or simply allowing the Russian to annex the countries.

One of the limited options cited in the study could include taking huge amounts of time to mobilize and deploy a massive counterattack force which would likely result in a drawn-out, deadly battle. Another possibility would be to threaten a nuclear option, a scenario which seems unlikely if not completely unrealistic in light of the U.S. strategy to decrease nuclear arsenals and discourage the prospect of using nuclear weapons, the study finds.

A third and final option, the report mentions, would simply be to concede the Baltic states and immerse the alliance into a much more intense Cold War posture. Such an option would naturally not be welcomed by many of the residents of these states and would, without question, leave the NATO alliance weakened if not partially fractured.

The study spells out exactly what its wargames determined would be necessary as a credible, effective deterrent.

Gaming indicates that a force of about seven brigades, including three heavy armored brigadesadequately supported by airpower, land-based fires, and other enablers on the ground and ready to fight at the onset of hostilitiescould suffice to prevent the rapid overrun of the Baltic states, the study writes.

During the various scenarios explored for the wargame, its participants concluded that NATO resistance would be overrun quickly in the absence of a larger mechanized defensive force posture.

The absence of short-range air defenses in the U.S. units, and the minimal defenses in the other NATO units, meant that many of these attacks encountered resistance only from NATO combat air patrols, which were overwhelmed by sheer numbers. The result was heavy losses to several Blue (NATO) battalions and the disruption of the counterattack, the study states.

Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia could be likely Russian targets because all three countries are in close proximity to Russia and spent many years as part of the former Soviet Union, the study maintains.

Also like Ukraine, Estonia and Latvia are home to sizable ethnic Russian populations that have been at best unevenly integrated into the two countries post-independence political and social mainstreams and that give Russia a self-justification for meddling in Estonian and Latvian affairs, the study explains.

The Rand study maintained that, while expensive, adding brigades would be a worthy effort for NATO.

Buying three brand-new ABCTs and adding them to the U.S. Army would not be inexpensivethe up-front costs for all the equipment for the brigades and associated artillery, air defense, and other enabling units runs on the order of $13 billion. However, much of that gearespecially the expensive Abrams tanks and Bradley fighting vehiclesalready exists, the study says.

The actual NATO troop presence in Eastern Europe is something that is still under consideration and subject to change in this new administration. For quite some time, NATO and the US have been considering adding more troops to the Eastern flank as a way to further deter Russia.

The Pentagons European Reassurance Initiative, introduced last year, calls for additional funds, forces and force rotations through Europe in coming years, it is unclear what the force posture will ultimately be.

At the same time, the Pentagons $3.4 Billion ERI request does call for an increased force presence in Europe as well as fires, pre-positioned stocks and headquarters support for NATO forces.

Officials with U.S. Army Europe tell Scout Warrior that more solidarity exercises with NATO allies in Europe are also on the horizon, and that more manpower could also be on the way.

For example, NATO conducted Swift Response 16 from May 27 through June 26 of last year in Poland and Germany; it included more than 5,000 soldiers and airmen from the United States, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal and Spain.

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How Much of a Military Threat Does Russia Pose to NATO and the US? - Scout

Trump demands other NATO members pay their fair share – POLITICO.eu

U.S. President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of the U.S. Congress on February 28 | Jim Lo Scalzo - Pool/Getty Images

Our partners must meet their financial obligations, Trump said.

By Nahal Toosi

3/1/17, 4:53 AM CET

Updated 3/1/17, 8:20 AM CET

Just in case any NATO members hadnt gotten the message, U.S. President Donald Trump said it once again Tuesday night: You need to pay up.

The Republican president, in his speech before a joint session of Congress, held firm to demands that other countries in the decades-old military alliance must spend more on defense and not simply count on the United States to cover for them.

We strongly support NATO, an alliance forged through the bonds of two World Wars that dethroned fascism, and a Cold War that defeated communism. But our partners must meet their financial obligations, Trump said. And now, based on our very strong and frank discussions, they are beginning to do just that.

He then ad-libbed: In fact, I can tell you the money is pouring in, very much.

He didnt offer details, but some NATO states have said since before Trump was elected that they were increasing their defense spending.

Trumps complaint about other NATO members not spending enough on defense is hardly unique to him. Even his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama, urged other NATO members to stop relying so heavily on the United States to financially carry the military alliance.

Only a handful of NATOs 28 members meet the target of spending at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense.

But despite his vows of support for NATO on Tuesday, Trump has often spoken of the alliance in highly dismissive terms, calling it obsolete and suggesting that the United States may not stick to its treaty obligations and come to the aid of fellow NATO members not paying their fair share.

That has deeply alarmed NATO members in Europe, who are increasingly wary of Russian aggression. Trumps insistence that the U.S. needs to improve its relationship with Moscow hasnt helped.

In what appeared to be a veiled reference to Russia, Trump on Tuesday said, America is willing to find new friends, and to forge new partnerships, where shared interests align.

We want peace, wherever peace can be found, he added later, noting. America is friends today with former enemies.

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Trump demands other NATO members pay their fair share - POLITICO.eu

NATO’s Strange Addition of Montenegro Consortiumnews – Consortium News

Exclusive: Official Washingtons New Cold Warriors are painting NATOs admission of tiny Montenegro in the stark black-and-white colors of a heroic stand against Russian aggression but that misses the real reasons why its a bad idea, writes Jonathan Marshall.

By Jonathan Marshall

Any day now, Arizona Senator John McCain promises, the U.S. Senate will vote to approve the incorporation of Montenegro as the 29th member state in the NATO alliance. Though few Americans likely know where to find the tiny Balkan nation on a map, Montenegro has become another dubious focal point of the Wests new confrontation with Russia.

At first glance, the case for extending NATOs umbrella over a country with fewer than 2,000 troops isnt obvious. Its seven helicopters are unlikely to make America safer. The Obama administration, which championed this latest in a long line of recent additions to the alliance, actually offered as a rationale the fact that Montenegro had donated some mortar rounds to the anti-ISIS coalition in Iraq and $1.2 million to NATOs operations in Afghanistan over three years.

That sum is less than a third of what U.S. taxpayers spend in Afghanistan per hour. One critic quipped, if the Wests survival depends on Montenegros inclusion in NATO, we should all be heading for the bunkers.

Maybe thats why hawks are citing the mere fact of Russias predictable opposition as a prime reason to support Montenegros accession. Backing Montenegros membership is not only the right thing for the Senate to do, it would send a clear signal that no third party has a veto over NATO enlargement decisions, argues the Heritage Foundation.

And two advocates at the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, writing in Foreign Affairs, declared recently that Montenegro will be the key test of whether President Trump and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson kowtow to their friend Russian President Vladimir Putin and acquiesce . . . in another Yalta or stand up for core U.S. goals.

Raising the specter of Putin and Yalta diverts attention from troubling questions about Montenegros political suitability as a partner and whether it has anything of military value to offer.

NATO ostensibly conditions its acceptance of new members on strict criteria, which include demonstrating a commitment to the rule of law and human rights; establishing democratic control of armed forces; and promoting stability and well-being through economic liberty, social justice and environmental responsibility.

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Michael Carpenter assured the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last September that Montenegro supported NATOs values of democracy, individual liberty, and the rule of law. He must have missed the report from Freedom House, which gave the country a rating of only partly free for both political rights and civil liberties.

The organization cited restrictions on the freedom of peaceful assembly and years of harassment and discrimination against LGBT people. It also noted ongoing concerns . . . about the independence of the judiciary and the public broadcaster, as well as numerous failures to effectively prosecute past attacks against media workers. The country suffers from a lack of trust in the electoral process among voters, it added.

Carpenter must also have missed the State Departments human rights report, which accused Montenegro of numerous violations, including impunity for war crimes, mistreatment by law enforcement officers of persons in their custody, overcrowded and dilapidated prisons and pretrial detention facilities, violations of the right to peaceful assembly, and selective prosecution of political and societal opponents.

A Bastion of Corruption

As for the rule of law, consider that Montenegros ruler for nearly three decades, Milo Djukanovi?, was given the 2015 Organized Crime and Corruption Person of the Year Award by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization of several hundred investigative journalists who report on corruption in Europe and Central Asia (and are partly financed by USAID).

Citing his success in creating an oppressive political atmosphere and an economy choked by corruption and money laundering, the OCCRP said Djukanovi? has built one of the most dedicated kleptocracies and organized crime havens in the world.

The organization pointed to his alleged role in cigarette smuggling with notorious Italian crime syndicates; his familys takeover of a former state bank, which became a money laundry for organized crime; his controversial sale of major stretches of the countrys coastline to shady foreign oligarchs; and his offer of citizenship to a notorious regional drug kingpin.

Djukanovi? knows the money is greener to the west of Montenegro than to the east. Thats why hes an ardent advocate of joining NATO. (Fewer than 40 percent of Montenegrins in a recent poll agreed in part because alliance warplanes bombed the country during NATOs campaign against Serbia in 1999.) President Obama congratulated Djukanovi? on his stand during an official reception in September.

Following national elections in October, Djukanovi? finally stepped down as prime minister, but he remains head of the ruling party. Taking his place as the countrys current prime minister was his hand-picked deputy, Dusko Markovic.

Markovic, a former state security chief, is considered one of Djukanovi?s closest confidantes, reported OCCRP. He was publicly accused by a former head of the countrys anti-organized crime police last year of involvement incigarette smuggling, but was never charged. In 2014, Markovic was also charged by the head of a government investigative commission with obstructing a probe into the murder of a prominent newspaper editor and critic of Djukanovi?.

Western media have large ignored such troubling facts. Instead, what little coverage there is of Montenegro focuses on the governments sensational claim that Russians plotted to assassinate Djukanovi? at the time of the October election.

Markovic recently told Time magazine that his security services at the last minute uncovered a criminal organization formed by two Russian military intelligence agents, who planned on election day to provoke incidents . . . and also possibly an armed conflict as a pretext for taking power.

The prosecutor in charge of the case says Russian state authorities backed the plot to prevent Montenegro from joining NATO. He vows to indict two alleged Russian plotters and 22 others, including a group of Serbian nationalists, by April 15. Russias foreign minister called the allegations baseless, but refuses to extradite any suspects. An independent expert, citing numerous anomalies in the official story, argues the plot was a rogue operation by Serbian and Russian nationalist freelancers.

Russia, which has long considered the Balkans to be in its sphere of influence, has a history of intruding in Montenegros affairs. But absent persuasive supporting evidence for the governments case, outsiders should bear in mind the cautionary observation by Freedom House that [Montenegros] intelligence service has faced sustained criticism from international observers for a perceived lack of professionalism.

Still, it should come as no surprise that anti-Russia hawks havent let ambiguous evidence deter them from demanding the expansion of NATO.

A Wall Street Journal editorial said the alleged coup plot gives a good taste of Russias ambitions and methods in Eastern and Central Europe and concluded with a call for accepting Montenegros bid to join NATO: Western security is best served by supporting democratic governments of any size facing pressure from regional bullies. The alternative is to deliver another country into Moscows grip, and whet its appetite to take another.

Time magazine commented even more breathlessly that The aborted coup was a reminder that a new battle for Europe has begun. From the Baltics to the Balkans and the Black Sea to Great Britain, Vladimir Putin is seeking to rebuild Russias empire more than 25 years after the fall of the Soviet Union. Trumps past criticism of NATO, the magazine warned, has raised flags that the U.S. might accept Russias territorial grab.

Such inflammatory comments are stoking the political fires burning around Trump, including investigations of his campaign contacts with Russians, assertions of Moscows interference with the election, and questions about business connections or personal indiscretions that make him vulnerable to Putin. Trumps stand on Montenegro still to be determined will signal whether he remains a critic of NATO or is caving to the New Cold Warriors.

Jonathan Marshall is author of many recent articles on arms issues, including Obamas Unkept Promise on Nuclear War, How World War III Could Start,NATOs Provocative Anti-Russian Moves,Escalations in a New Cold War,and Ticking Closer to Midnight.

The rest is here:

NATO's Strange Addition of Montenegro Consortiumnews - Consortium News

Model NATO lands Superior Delegation award – UTA The Shorthorn

Armed with facts, charisma and just a pinch of acting, UTAs Model NATO traveled to Washington, D.C., for the International Model NATO Conference from Feb. 15 to Sunday.

Members of the UTA organization served on different committees to cover several topics NATO currently faces. NATO is a partnership between the U.S. and nearly 30 other countries to form a military alliance.

German junior Matthew Estrada co-delegated a committee on emerging security, which concerns indirect threats like cyber warfare, he said.

Alisha Adams, critical language international studies in German senior, served as a Norway delegate on a committee dealing with tactical nuclear planning and won Superior Delegation. She described her role as the voice of reason.

Norway would say, Youre being aggressive, this is not safe. This can threaten the environment, she said. I was kind of like the hippie, I guess. The environmentally-friendly delegate.

Ricardo Ortiz, Model NATOs executive officer, said he enjoyed being the Russian delegate on the partnerships committee.

The amount of studying the group did before leaving varied between members.

Estrada, who won Independent Leadership with his fellow club member, said it was important to research their respective committees as much as possible.

Overall, I dont see this as necessarily an easy job, he said.

Among studying Norways positions on issues that NATO faces, studying other members stances were equally as important, he said.

But history senior Morse disagreed.

You see two sides of things, he said. You see the intense study and work needed for these kinds of things the knowledge, the information and the ability to sell ice to Eskimos.

Most members agreed that learning to play a role was a huge part of this conference.

In Adams committee, she could see how persuasion could be an overshadowing force.

If you were a well-spoken person and very charming, you could have other delegates ignore them and more in more of the direction you want to go, Adams said.

History senior Ortiz earned much attention after following a suggestion from Micah Morse, fellow Model NATO member, and the organizations faculty adviser, Lonny Harrison.

At one point during his committees discussions, Ortiz noted a real-life incident during NATO discussions in 1966. Taking off his shoe and slamming it on the table, Ortiz harkened back to Nikita Khrushchevs tenure as a Russian delegate.

For me, its all about being able to improvise, which is supported what facts you know, he said. I was Russia, so I was basically playing devils advocate for this conference. Im not going to lie, it was pretty fun.

This commitment to his role as the Russian delegate earned him a Superior Delegation award at the conference.

On top of individual awards and the participation award given to everyone, UTAs Model NATO won an overall Superior Delegation award, only beat by three other delegations.

Despite the awards, Estrada said the best thing about the conference is all the people hes met.

It helps build a repertoire of people you can look to for advice or for information or help, he said.

@oakford_jamil

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Model NATO lands Superior Delegation award - UTA The Shorthorn

NATO to US: ‘Yessir, how high shall we jump, Mr. Trump, sir?’ – Herald and News

Candidate Donald Trump set off a furious controversy when he said NATO countries should pay their fair share of mutual defense costs and, later, that the treaty organization was obsolete because not enough of its efforts were directed against radical Islamic terrorism.

On Monday, Vice President Mike Pence took the Trump message to NATO headquarters in Brussels. And after all the controversy and complaining, NATOs response could be boiled down to a single sentence: Yes sir, Mr. Trump.

News reports from Pences news conference with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg focused on Pences effort to reassure nervous NATO officials that the U.S. will stand behind its treaty commitments. It is my privilege here at the NATO headquarters to express the strong support of President Trump and the United States of America for NATO and our transatlantic alliance, Pence said. I can say with confidence, America will do our part.

Story continues below video

But at least as newsworthy was what happened next. Pence dropped the hammer of Trumps demands, and NATO quickly went along.

Europes defense requires Europes commitment as much as ours, Pence said. He reminded the group that in 2014 all 28 members of NATO promised to try to spend two percent of their GDP on defense by 2024. Only four countries, in addition to the U.S., are now meeting that standard. As a candidate, Trump repeatedly called for NATO to pay more, Pence noted.

And now Trump is president. So let me say again what I said this last weekend in Munich, Pence said The president of the United States and the American people expect our allies to keep their word and to do more in our common defense, and the president expects real progress by the end of 2017. ... It is time for actions, not words.

Just in case anyone missed the message, Pence encouraged the NATO countries that dont spend two percent on defense to accelerate their plans to get there. And if you dont have a plan, Pence said, get one.

To which NATO quickly acceded. I fully support what has been underlined by President Trump and by Vice President Pence today, the importance of burden sharing, Stoltenberg said. I expect all allies to make good on the promise that we made in 2014 to increase defense spending and to make sure to have a fairer burden of sharing.

On the issue of terrorism, Stoltenberg said yes again. First, he noted that NATO is helping train security forces in Afghanistan and Iraq and is contributing surveillance planes to the fight against the Islamic State. Then he added what Pence wanted to hear: But we agree that the alliance can, and should do more, in the fight against terrorism.

Its hard to overstate the near-hysteria that met Trumps fair share and obsolete comments. But the fact is, burden sharing is an old idea, and a non-controversial one. Modernizing NATOs approach in the age of the Islamic State is also eminently reasonable. And now NATO, facing the reality of a Trump presidency, has little choice but to go along.

The bottom line is that Donald Trump moved the NATO debate. After much fretting, and complaining, and denouncing, NATO did the simplest thing: It went along.

Byron York is chief political correspondent for The Washington Examiner.

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NATO to US: 'Yessir, how high shall we jump, Mr. Trump, sir?' - Herald and News

3 things to know about the Trump administration’s warning shots on NATO – Washington Post

By Michael Hikari Cecire By Michael Hikari Cecire February 27

Americans cannot care more for your childrens security than you do, U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis cautioned NATO defense ministers in Brussels in mid-February, urging European allies to get serious about providing for their own defense.

Mattis put the alliance on notice that U.S. patience was finite and suggested that Washingtons commitment to European security was potentially at risk, noting, [If] your nations do not want to see America moderate its commitment to the alliance, each of your capitals needs to show its support for our common defense.

Do Mattiss warnings represent a genuine shift in U.S. policy on European security? Here are three things to know.

1) U.S. concern over European allies low levels of spending is not new. Mattis is only the latest U.S. defense secretary to voice frustrations about NATO burden-sharing. Former secretaries Ashton Carter, Leon Panetta and Robert Gates all offered similar concerns during their tenures at the Pentagon. Even former president Barack Obama expressed worries about free riders in Europe. This sentiment is not without merit, as the United States is the leading direct funder of NATO and U.S. defense spending represents nearly 75 percent of the total defense spending of the 28-member alliance.

Washingtons weariness over being Europes dominant security provider are long-standing and bipartisan. However, while Mattis was more diplomatic in his choice of language compared with President Donald Trumps acerbic style, the implication was clear. The U.S. security commitment to Europe depends on alliance partners meeting their 2006 promise to spend 2 percent of GDP on defense.

[Yes, NATO is sharing the defense burden. Heres what we found.]

2) NATOs target of 2 percent of GDP defense spending obfuscates as much as it reveals. Although Mattiss statements might compel NATO allies to spend more, this spending will not necessarily produce a better-prepared or more unified alliance. Defense spending is an indirect indicator of military readiness and includes variables that may have only an ancillary effect on military strength budget entries such as salaries, health care, pensions, accommodations, training and logistics. These noncombat budget items can easily devour defense spending.

[The Trump administration wants Europe to pay more to defend itself. Its not that easy.]

Each of the 28 NATO member states have different means and methods of spending. Allies that rely on conscription, such as Norway and Estonia, may be able to spend less on personnel per unit than countries with an all-volunteer military. States with socialized health care, such as Britain, do not have to pay separately for a parallel military health system, such as the one available to the U.S. military and their families.

Defense budgets are also tethered to a countrys relative purchasing power and spending efficiency. States that use military spending for economic development or political purposes can spend more without necessarily improving combat readiness. Valeri Ratchev, a Bulgarian defense expert, perhaps put it best when he wryly suggested that the best way for a country to meet the 2 percent spending target was simply to double thesalaries of troops.

Front-line states bordering Russia are already spending more. Poland and Estonia spend at least 2 percent of GDP on defense, and other states on NATOs eastern flank are increasing their budgets in response to Russias annexation of Crimea in 2014. Yet Eastern European allies remain the most vulnerable of the NATO states.

By comparison, several of the most militarily credible NATO members dont quite hit the 2 percent target. France, one of the few NATO states capable of conducting large, complex military operations independently, spends just 1.78 percent of GDP on defense. Turkey, which operates extensively in Syria and fields the second-largest military in NATO after the United States, spends 1.56 percent of its GDP on defense.

Greece is one country that does hit the 2 percent target, spending about 2.4 percent of GDP on defense despite deep economic difficulties. But the bulk of Greek defense spending is oriented to counter neighboring Turkey, a fellow NATO member.

[Yes, Putin may be starting to win Georgia away from the West. Heres why that matters.]

3) The greater threat to NATO military readiness is about willpower, not money. Divergent threat perceptions and parochial interests among the 28 members do more damage to NATOs military credibility than spending ratios. As Russia demonstrated in Georgia, Ukraine and Syria, decisiveness and first-mover advantage can compensate for limited resources and sophistication Russias defense budget is barely larger than Britains and smaller than Saudi Arabias.

Conversely, there is little evidence to suggest that a better-funded army would make more dovish allies such as Germany more inclined to more aggressively confront Russian aggression. While its recent troop deployment to the Baltics sends a strong message, Germany is generally regarded as skeptical over deterring Russia, and even toward NATO obligations overall.

A 2015 Pew survey found that only 38 percent of Germans supported using force to defend NATO allies, compared with 56 percent among U.S. respondents and 53 percent in Canada (which spends less than 1 percent on defense). The relevant measure of Germanys commitment to collective security is its willingness to act, not whether it spends 1 percent or 10 percent on defense.

[Worried about NATO? Here are 3 things to watch.]

Threat perceptions diverge strongly throughout the alliance. Even in Afghanistan, many NATO states chose to constrain their involvement through national caveats. Troop contingents from Germany, Italy and Spain, for instance, were restricted in the types of operations they conducted in-country, leaving more dangerous missions to contributors without caveats, such as the United States, Britain, Poland and over-performing non-NATO partnerssuch as Georgia.

It is not difficult to understand why the United States would seek more equitable spending from NATO allies, but Washington gains more from the security architecture NATO enshrines than it would from marginal increases in European defense spending. NATO has been a good deal for U.S. national security; its founding helped arrest a spiral of destructive intra-European conflicts and established norms that contributed to an unprecedented period of peace and prosperity in much of North America and Europe.

So even if every NATO ally hit the 2 percent target, Washington would still easily dominate aggregate NATO defense spending. The new administrations tough talk may make for good politics, but it is unclear whether it will do much to make Europe or the alliance stronger.

Michael Hikari Cecire is an international security analyst and a nonresident fellow at New America and the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

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3 things to know about the Trump administration's warning shots on NATO - Washington Post

Editorial: Trump White House is figuring out NATO – Boulder Daily Camera

U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis speaks during a media conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels on Feb. 16. Mattis told NATO ministers that the alliance is "a fundamental bedrock for the United States" while at the same time demanding an increased financial commitment from the 27 other alliance members. (Virginia Mayo / AP)

Slowly, and against the odds, the Trump administration is inching toward a more coherent foreign policy in Western Europe.

President Donald Trump is, as usual, sending wildly mixed signals. He has said NATO the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is obsolete. He has been too cozy with Russian President Vladimir Putin, apparently terrifying the leadership of free democracies in Europe.

But the president's subordinates have delivered a stronger, more reassuring message. Vice President Mike Pence, speaking in Belgium, said the U.S. remains committed to the defense alliance created during the presidency of Harry Truman.

"We need a strong alliance more than ever," Pence said. At the same time, the vice president delivered an important message to NATO allies: They must spend more on their armies and navies so the U.S. can spend less. "Europeans cannot ask the United States to commit to Europe's defense if they are not willing to commit more themselves," he said.

He's right. Only five of 28 NATO members meet or exceed the target threshold of spending 2 percent of GDP on defense a woefully low number. Spending less on tanks and planes means European nations including France and Italy can spend more on domestic programs in their nations or keep taxes low.

Those options should be available to U.S. taxpayers as well. Last year, according to the Financial Times, European NATO members spent $253 billion on defense. The United States spent $618 billion, far more than any nation on earth.

European nations have offered vague promises to review their military spending. They've also said humanitarian aid should be counted in their totals. Perhaps. We agree with the argument that U.S. military spending in Europe is good not only for Europeans, but also for Americans. It helps deter the Russians from threatening the region.

But Trump's murky relationship with Russia remains a matter of deep concern. We'd take his suggestions of detente with Russia more seriously if we didn't have the nagging feeling the president's personal and political interests are intertwined with Putin's. We're worried the Russians may be tempted to test the depth of that relationship, whatever it is.

That's why Pence's speech on NATO was significant. Someone is paying attention to foreign affairs, without one eye on the bottom line. America is $20 trillion in debt. We cannot police the world alone, a message the Trump administration, to its credit, appears to understand.

Kansas City Star

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Editorial: Trump White House is figuring out NATO - Boulder Daily Camera

Secretary General welcomes Armenian President to NATO Headquarters – NATO HQ (press release)

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Secretary General welcomes Armenian President to NATO Headquarters - NATO HQ (press release)

KSU Model NATO brings home awards from DC – KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper

Of the six awards brought home by KSU, five were committee awards. Photo credit: Model NATO Team

KSUs Model NATO team won six awards at the 2017 International Model NATO Conference, held in Washington D.C. from Feb. 14-19.

Of the six awards brought home by KSU, five were committee awards. The other was the Overall Outstanding Delegation Award, which was won by only four teams at the conference.

Twenty colleges and universities competed from across the United States, Belgium, the United Kingdom and Canada. Although some schools attended with more than one team, each team represented a different member nation of NATO. Students acted as delegates, defending their nations policies.

The Model NATO conference simulates a real meeting of NATO officials, said Brook Doss, a senior journalism major and the team leader for KSU. It focuses on diplomacy and small group negotiation to solve real world problems, as well as a crisis simulation that is built by the faculty.

Doss explained that, this year, the topic forced students to focus on counter-terrorism and cyber security.

[The teams] draft language that eventually becomes a resolution and goes into a final communique that is sent to the real NATO in Brussels, Doss explained.

KSUs nine-student team represented the Czech Republic, and faculty adviser and professor Stephen McKelvey was proud of the teams performance.

This was the best team we have had in decades, McKelvey said. I could not have asked for a better team.

As a part of the conference, the students went to the Embassy of the Czech Republic. The team was briefed by the First Secretary of the Embassy and the Minister-Counselor of the Embassy about Czech policy within NATO. This allowed the students to further solidify their stance in regards to the Czech Republics positions.

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KSU Model NATO brings home awards from DC - KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper

US experts confirm Russians played prank on NATO chief Stoltenberg report – RT

Published time: 27 Feb, 2017 15:31

Russian pranksters who called Jens Stoltenberg in early February, one of them introducing himself as Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko, did indeed reach the NATO Secretary General, Life.ru reported, citing US experts.

After Life.ru initially published the conversation, NATO accused them of disinformation, the Russian tabloid says. It then decided to contact an American investigative agency to prove the authenticity of the recording.

Life.ru gave VIP Protective Services Inc., a company that employs former agents from FBI, CIA and a number of European agencies, their recordings that featured a conversation between the pranksters and, allegedly, NATO chief Stoltenberg.

The phone talk in question happened earlier this month, when prankster Lexus, who works in tandem with another man known as Vovan, introduced himself as Poroshenko and asked the supposed Jens Stoltenberg whether Ukraine could become a NATO member within the next two years, as advised by American partners.

Read more

The prankster posing as the Ukrainian leader was then told that there might have been a misunderstanding, as to be able to meet the standards which are required for a NATO membership, Kiev officials have to do more and focus on reform.

READ MORE: Ukrainian pilot relaxes dry hunger strike after pranksters send fake Poroshenko letter

The person who the prankster spoke to was indeed Stoltenberg, the US agency concluded, according to Life.ru. Having analyzed the files they received for voice identification comparison, one known and one unknown speaker are the same speaker, it said.

A number of features including pitch, mannerisms and even breath patterns have been used for the voice identification analysis, it added, saying that the most precise approach has been taken to identify if the person making comments on Ukraine's NATO membership is Stoltenberg.

Earlier, a Russian expert came to the same conclusion, Life.ru reported.

The pranksters gained popularity in Russia after they managed to speak over the phone with a number of high ranking officials and celebrities. Lexus and Vovan once made Elton John believe he had spoken to President Vladimir Putin about gay rights which later led to a Kremlin promise to meet with the British pop icon for real.

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US experts confirm Russians played prank on NATO chief Stoltenberg report - RT

3 Changes NATO Must Make To Remain A True Alliance – Forbes


Forbes
3 Changes NATO Must Make To Remain A True Alliance
Forbes
US Secretary of Defense James Mattis met with defense ministers from other NATO member countries in Brussels on Feb. 15. He had a message to deliver from the Trump White House. The meeting was closed, but some of Mattis's comments were released ...
Reshaping NATO?FrontPage Magazine
NATO Revamped: Why the Alliance Needs to ChangeThe National Interest Online
Only 5 of 28 NATO member countries meet their defense spending requirementsAmeriForce Publishing, Inc.
NUjournal
all 6 news articles »

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3 Changes NATO Must Make To Remain A True Alliance - Forbes

A stronger NATO for a safer world – The Hill (blog)

At NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, Secretary James Mattis, at a joint press conference on Feb. 15 with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, stated: America will meet its responsibilities, but if your nations do not want to see America moderate its commitment to the alliance, each of your capitals needs to show its support for our common defense. This statement is significant, not only for its content but for its context.

In just the last week, it was reported that a Russian intelligence collection ship was operating off the east coast of the United States; Russia had deployed a new missile system to NATOs borders that may violate the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty; and Russian military aircraft had conducted high-speed passes over U.S. Navy ships operating in the Black Sea.

While an intelligence ship operating near the coast and aircraft buzzing U.S. Navy ships are not necessarily new, particularly in recent years, the deployment of a new missile system that violates a long-standing treaty is certainly something new, and further reveals Vladimir Putins strategic intentions to undermine the West and its institutions.

Within this context, it was reassuring to many at home, and certainly to our allies in Europe, that during appearances at the Munich Security Conference and the NATO ministerial respectively, Mattis and Vice President Pence reaffirmed the United Statess commitment to NATO, and also made it clear that Russia would be held accountable for its actions.

Mattis went a bit further in noting that any cooperation would be contingent on Russia first taking positive steps to meet its obligations. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, in his first face-to-face meeting with Lavrov, insisted that Russia live up to the terms of the Minsk agreement and limit its involvement in the internal affairs of Ukraine.

Given the assertions about potential divisions in the Trump administration, could these statements from Mattis and Tillerson reveal some kind of good cop, bad cop routine, with the president playing the good cop in an otherwise hard-line administration?

Or is it, as our European allies worry, just a symptom of a dysfunctional administration?

Only time will tell. But what is needed now is not good cop, bad cop. What is needed is clarity of purpose and resolve.

If Winston Churchill were with us today, he may have reiterated one of his well-known statements from the WWI period: It is no use saying, 'We are doing our best.' You have got to succeed in doing what is necessary. Churchills point is as insightful today as it was in his time.

Sen. John McCainJohn McCainFather of slain Navy SEAL wants investigation A stronger NATO for a safer world Drug importation won't save dollars or lives MORE (R-Ariz.) clearly took on that mantle of leadership and resolve in his speech at the Munich conference, closely echoing Churchills words: The unprecedented period of security and prosperity that we have enjoyed for the past seven decades did not happen by accident. It happened not only because of the appeal of our values, but because we backed them with our power and persevered in their defense. Our predecessors did not believe in the end of history or that it bends, inevitably, toward justice. That is up to us. That requires our persistent, painstaking effort.

Given the level of effort that the United States has put into reinvigorating its involvement in European security, it is understandable that the president and the American people expect our allies to meet their treaty requirements. This is nothing new; the last three administrations have pushed our NATO allies to step up their funding for defense. However, the events of today require a renewed and unambiguous call for NATO member countries to meet their obligations.

From our time on Capitol Hill and in various other meetings and conferences, we have met with U.S. and allied military commanders. There is a clear commitment among the uniformed services of our alliance partners to increase joint training and improve our force structure in Europe. What is needed now is a political commitment to providing the resources required to enable that cooperation.

The Obama administration took some small steps in that direction, though Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, the commander of U.S. Army Forces in Europe, must be given a great deal of credit. He seized the initiative and pushed for more forward deployed U.S. equipment and personnel in Europe. Hodges's leadership is commendable, but the full commitment to the alliance, the security of Europe, and Western interests cannot rest with one generals ingenuity and sheer will.

Nor can any of this be protected with only a portion of the NATO alliance meeting their full commitment. In the words of the NATO secretary-general: The challenges we face are the most complex and demanding in a generation. Neither Europe nor North America can tackle them alone. A strong NATO is good for Europe, a strong Europe is good for North America.

The events of today require a renewed and unambiguous call for NATO member countries to meet their obligations. However, building the public awareness and the political will to meet those obligations is unlikely to be accomplished solely through the holding of joint press conferences on the margins of a ministerial meetings or international conferences. The leaders of NATO, European thought leaders, influencers and activists must commit to visiting the member states who are not currently meeting the funding threshold and taking the case to the people.

This outreach should be accompanied by a media campaign that takes advantage of the various social networks to bring a new generation of supports to the NATO cause. The message must be clear and unequivocal: The threats of the past are re-emerging, the threat of terrorism grows with each passing day, and we need to be more, not less, involved in the conflicts in North Africa and the Middle East so that we can meet the threat of terrorism before it reaches the shores of Europe or North America. No one country, no matter how powerful, can protect us.

We, in the West, must heed the words of Churchill, in another time and McCain, in our time and be in this together.

Joseph Whited is the former Intelligence Lead for the House Armed Services Committee. He spent over 18 years serving in the intelligence community.

Alex Gallo is senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and served as a professional staff member on the House Armed Services Committee.

The views of contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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A stronger NATO for a safer world - The Hill (blog)

Facing Russia and Terrorism, a NATO Outsider Urges EU to Step Up – Bloomberg

by

February 26, 2017, 5:00 PM EST February 27, 2017, 1:56 AM EST

Finland is urging Europe to increase NATO contributions and focus more on security as the continent grapples with political turmoil from all sides, including from within.

Once the U.K. has quit the European Union, the 27 nations left behind need to double down on the blocs founding principle and give the remaining 444 million citizens what they most crave: security,Finnish President Sauli Niinisto said in an interview at his seaside residence in Helsinki on Friday. The 68-year-old is head of state of the nation that shares the EUs longest border with Russia, a country with which Finland has regular contact for security and practical reasons.

Sauli Niinisto on Friday, Feb. 24.

Photographer: Roni Rekomaa/Bloomberg

The discussion dealing with security is one of those elements where we have the possibility to ensure European citizens that Brussels can take care of your security and that would be a huge message these days, Niinisto said.

The comments come as a spate of elections threatens to deepen the EUs biggest existential crisis in its 60-year history.The bloc is also being challenged in the east by Russia and in the west by a new U.S. administration that has predicted its disintegration, just over four years after it won the Nobel Peace Prize.

Finnish president urges Europe to increase NATO contributions

Source: Bloomberg)

As it struggles to regain the legitimacy it lost in the eyes of many of its citizens following the debt crisis, the EU now faces a populist swell that threatens to undo many of the blocs founding principles.

Niinisto said a shift away from the center in French politics in connection with elections starting in April wouldnt be a minor issue. He also stated his belief that National Front candidate Marine Le Pen wont win the presidency on May 7. She has said she wants to take the euro zones second-biggest economy out of the single currency bloc.

Niinisto warns that, after a generation of peace, theres a risk the EU has grown too complacent to the security risks it faces. Terrorist attacks in the heart of the EU -- in Paris, Brussels and Berlin -- underscore the need for safeguards.

In Europe we have been living in very peaceful decades and during that time very many countries have actually a bit forgotten the security details and policy, he said. Now its coming back.

He also says that decades of U.S. demands, reiterated by the new administration, that European members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization foot their share of the security bill are understandable.

If theres an agreement, surely it should be fulfilled, he said.

Finland, which has stayed out of NATO largely due to its proximity to Russia, is building closer military ties with neighboring Sweden, which is also militarily non-aligned.

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Germany, Europes biggest economy, is working toward raising its military budget to reach NATOs target of 2 percent of gross domestic product, Chancellor Angela Merkel said this month. If Germany and France alone were to meet that target by 2024, it could add more than $40 billion to their defense spending, almost two-thirds the amount Russia spends. But European nations have so far refused to consolidate their defense industries or procurement, meaning the euros they do spend dont have as much clout as each dollar spent by the U.S. or every ruble spent by Russia.

Im sure that individuals, families around Europe, feel a bit unsafe, Niinisto said. My thinking is that maybe the main task that the union has is to make sure for everybody that they can live in peace, that they can work in peace, that they can develop their society in peace.

Niinisto said he is in contact with Moscow, Berlin and Washington -- though is put off by self-declared peace mediators not appointed to such roles. Finlands contacts with Russia are maybe a bit more frequent, thats because were close to Russia, he said. Its one of the main pillars of our security policy to keep up the dialogue.

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Facing Russia and Terrorism, a NATO Outsider Urges EU to Step Up - Bloomberg

An Alternative to NATO Expansion That Won’t Antagonize Russia – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

An Alternative to NATO Expansion That Won't Antagonize Russia
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Lost in the brouhaha over whether President Trump and his team are too friendly toward Russian President Vladimir Putin is a more important question. If the Trump administration is serious about its worthy goal of improving U.S. relations with Russia ...

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EU, NATO urge Macedonian leader to allow new government – POLITICO.eu

Zoran Zaev, leader of the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM), greets supporters in front of the government building after parliamentary elections in Skopje on December 11, 2016 | Robert Atanasovski/AFP via Getty Images

The Social Democratic Union of Macedonia said it has secured a coalition.

By David M. Herszenhorn

2/27/17, 2:09 AM CET

The European Commission and NATO urged the president of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Gjorge Ivanov, Sunday to abide by the countrys constitution and allow the formation of an opposition-led government, as the tiny Balkan country faced a crucial test of democratic norms.

Ivanovs party, VMRO-DPMNE, has controlled the government since 2006 and has largely dominated the countrys politics since 1990. But while thecenter-right VMRO-DPMNE finished first in parliamentary elections in December, winning51 seats, it failed to form a government, which requires a coalition of at least 61 MPs.

TheSocial Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM), which finished second in the elections with 49 seats, says it has secured a coalition and is demanding a mandate from Ivanov to form a government and install the partysleader, Zoran Zaev, as prime minister.

Zaev said he had clinched the needed votes byforging a deal withthe countrys largest Albanian party, the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI), and smaller Albanian parties.

After nearly 11 years of living under a regime, we have the chance to form a new democratic government of Macedonia, Zaev said in a statement, according to the Macedonian Information Agency, the official news service. Ivanvov has said he would give a mandate to form a government to a coalition with 61 votes, provided it would not violate the unitary character of Macedonia.

Zaevs deal apparently includes support for a law that would give Albanian status as an official language, a move that could give Ivanov a basis for trying to block the new government.

In what appeared to be a last-ditch power play, Nikola Gruevski, the leader of VMRO-DPMNE, issued a statement late Sunday night offering to back a Zaev-led government, but only if Zaev abandoned the language law and other proposals Gruevski insisted would splinter the country along ethnic lines.

If Zaev insists so badly to be prime minister, we will let him implement his program so long as he doesnt attack the state and national interests, Gruevski said, according to the MIA news service.

In an angry statement that bordered on a rant, Gruevski offered to be arrested, imprisoned, harassed, if needed to protect the country, and alleged that foreign meddlers including an unnamed foreign ambassador and George Soros, the billionaire civil-society activist, were trying to weaken Macedonia and have Zaev enthroned as prime minister.

In a statement on Sunday, Johannes Hahn, the European commissioner for neighborhood policy and enlargement negotiations, urgedIvanov to allow the formation of the SDSM-led government.

As enough signatures of MPs have been collected, Hahn said, We now expect the president to give the mandate to form the next government to the candidate from the parties which have the majority in the assembly, in line with the constitution.

In a pointed warning, Hahn continued, Change in democratic societies is natural and should be embraced, whenit is a result of credible elections. Accepting and respecting the election result and the right of leaders to try to form a government is a sign of a mature democracy. Obstructing and undermining such efforts has no place in a democratic process.

He added, We call on all relevant actors, including the president and the parliament, to act fully in line with the constitutions letter and spirit and in a responsible manner, to enable a swift formation of a government that will address overdue reforms.

In astatement, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg noted that the December parliamentary elections were well-administered and also called for Ivanov to let the process move forward.

Following one attempt to form a government, it has been announced that, in line with the requirement specified by the president, enough MPs signatures have now been collected, Stoltenberg said. I look to the authorities in Skopje to fulfill the next step in the democratic process. I call on all parties to exercise restraint in statements and actions, and take decisions for the benefit of all citizens.

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EU, NATO urge Macedonian leader to allow new government - POLITICO.eu