Could Nato soon be over – and what might replace it? - Powerful leaders have begun to publicly question the organisation’s future
European officials knew the president’s win would threaten the fundamental precepts of the post-World War II order. But the speed at which it is unraveling has created a crisis of enormous proportions.
4don MSNOpinion
We live in an era of multipolarity, where American hegemony is contested, and the assumptions that underpinned NATO’s longevity are eroding.
Europe wants to have a place at the table. Well, I told them, fight yourself a way to the table by coming up with concrete proposals,” said NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.
The Munich conference exposed tensions between the US and Europe over Nato and Ukraine - the BBC's Frank Gardner explains why this was a watershed in relations.
In the capital of the German state of Bavaria, Munich, many local residents came out to rally against NATO and military support for the Kiev regime.
10don MSN
Hours before Vance and Zelenskyy were set to meet, a Russian drone with a high-explosive warhead hit the protective confinement shell of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Kyiv region, the Ukrainian president said. Radiation levels have not increased, Zelenskyy and the U.N. atomic agency said.
"Get into the debate, not by complaining …. but by coming up with concrete ideas," he told the Munich Security Conference. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Saturday offered some blunt advice to European members of the military alliance in the face of ...
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday the U.S. did not want Ukraine to join NATO even before the Trump administration began changing the country’s approach toward the
MUNICH — The Trump administration began its first week of negotiations to end the war in Ukraine with a dizzying array of mixed signals that confused and worried America’s European allies and seemed to reward chiefly Russian President Vladimir Putin.
8don MSN
NATO members will have to bolster their defense spending by “considerably more than 3%” of their GDP, the alliance’s Secretary General Mark Rutte said.
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