22.7 C
London
Saturday, July 27, 2024
HomeDefenceUkraine and NATO. Five Lessons After Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion

Ukraine and NATO. Five Lessons After Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion

Date:

Related stories

Have Coffee, … will let the days pass

Paris/Jakarta (24/7 - 28.57).   "Coffee is the common...

Xi reaffirms China’s support for Tajikistan during rare visit

Beijing, Dushanbe announced upgrading of diplomatic relations. Chinese President Xi...

One must not take Trump at his word, says Juncker

Budapest (5/7 – 11.11) Former European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker...

Russia Bomb Kids’ Hospital in Kyiv, Massive Casualties

Kyiv (8/07 – 62.5) Ohmatdyt Children's Hospital in Kyiv was...

Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan taking action to curb sorcery and charlatanism

Rome (9/07 – 66.7) Fortune-telling is now a criminal act...
spot_imgspot_img

The upcoming NATO summit in Vilnius will be dominated by discussions on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. While member states have continued to provide all manner of aid to Kyiv, the Alliance has yet to take any concrete steps on Ukraine’s potential membership. Guidelines are now needed more than ever to strengthen both the security of Ukraine and the region.

Russia’s full-scale aggression against Ukraine not only radically changed the security situation for the Euro-Atlantic space, but also affected the global balance of power and the interests of both individual states and the alliances they belong to. NATO, which directly borders Russia, had to respond to a qualitatively new security and political landscape in the region. And this reaction will not be comprehensive without political lessons, which should be drawn from Russia’s full-fledged war against Ukraine.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

spot_img