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  • DPA

    NATO leaders to declare Ukraine's path to membership 'irreversible'

    By DPA,

    7 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0k67ID_0uMEGT3C00

    NATO leaders are expected to endorse a declaration of Ukraine's "irreversible path" to membership of the alliance on Wednesday, at a summit being held in Washington this week.

    The portion of text prepared for the summit declaration, seen by dpa on Wednesday, is intended to reassure Ukraine that its "future is in NATO." Leaders gathered on Tuesday for the first day of the summit, which is set to continue throughout Wednesday and Thursday.

    The text underscores that Ukraine can only join when all current members agree. The United States and Germany in particular are against rushing the process, diplomatic sources within the alliance said. But other NATO member states want to demonstrate that Russia cannot put the brakes on Ukraine joining NATO by waging war against the country.

    The text welcomes Ukraine's "concrete progress" on "its required democratic, economic and security reforms," since the last NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius a year ago.

    NATO has accepted the idea of Ukrainian membership in principle since 2008, while Ukraine has had its NATO membership ambitions enshrined in its national constitution since 2019.

    On the sidelines of the summit, the United States, the Netherlands and Denmark issued a joint statement saying that the promised transfer of US-made F-16 fighter jets from the Netherlands and Denmark to Ukraine is now under way.

    During an event at the Ronald Reagan Foundation in Washington on Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukraine was hoping to receive the first F-16s this summer. He said country needs at least 128 fighter jets, as Russia could deploy 300 aircraft per day. Zelensky is also attending the summit.

    US President Joe Biden on Tuesday opened the summit by announcing that NATO allies would supply additional air-defence systems to Ukraine.

    On Wednesday, Zelensky thanked German Chancellor Olaf Scholz for the delivery of Patriot air-defence systems from Germany.

    Arriving at the summit venue on Wednesday, newly appointed British Prime Minister Keir Starmer told reporters he had met Zelensky to assure him that the change of government in Britain would not affect the country's support for Ukraine.

    Starmer added that the Washington summit was an opportunity for the country's new centre-left Labour government to reaffirm its commitment to NATO.

    The United States and Germany also issued a joint statement on Wednesday announcing that the US will station long-range cruise missiles in Germany, in order to strengthen NATO's military deterrent in Europe.

    The statement said "episodic deployments" of the long-range missiles will begin in 2026.

    NATO leaders plan to continue to discuss support for Ukraine during Wednesday and Thursday.

    They are also expected to endorse a text calling on China to cease "all material and political support to Russia's war effort." China "cannot enable the largest war in Europe in recent history without this negatively impacting its interests and reputation," says the prepared text, seen by dpa.

    The leaders are expected to discuss outgoing NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg's plan to provide Kiev with military aid worth €40 billion ($43 billion) in 2025. NATO members have strongly supported Ukraine since the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022.

    According to Stoltenberg, NATO needs to convince Russia that it cannot win its war against Ukraine by waiting for Western support to wither.

    But the €40-billion pledge has been watered down from the multi-year financial commitment for Ukraine that Stoltenberg initially wanted. The alliance plans to review the military aid again next year.

    In June, NATO defence ministers approved a plan to coordinate aid to Ukraine through a new NATO structure called NATO Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine.

    The summit is Stoltenberg's last as secretary general. Former Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte is set to take over in October.

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