News Flash
BERLIN, Feb 10, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - NATO's secretary general called on Europe
to increase its arms production to support Ukraine and prevent "potentially
decades of confrontation" with Moscow, in an interview published by German
media Saturday.
Ahead of a key meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels and the second
anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war, Jens Stoltenberg insisted that "we need
to reconstitute and expand our industrial base faster, to increase deliveries
to Ukraine and refill our own stocks."
"This means shifting from slow peacetime to high-tempo conflict
production," he told the German Sunday daily Welt am Sonntag.
Meanwhile, the German army's chief-of-staff said the country's military
needs to be "war ready" in five years because of growing threats.
General Carsten Breuer told newspaper Die Welt in an interview due to be
published Sunday that for the first time since the end of the cold the country
faces "the possibility of a war imposed from outside."
Breuer said being ready for war involved a "change of mentality" as well as
improving Germany's military training and capacity.
Stoltenberg's comments came amidst growing pleas for shells, ammunition and
other military aide from Ukraine as it battles Russian forces into a third year.
Western leaders have also called for greater assistance. Germany's
Chancellor Olaf Scholz and President Joe Biden urged US lawmakers Friday to
approve a long-delayed military aid package for Ukraine, warning that Kyiv
could not hold off Russia's invasion without it.
"The failure of the United States' Congress in not supporting Ukraine is
close to criminal neglect," Biden said as he hosted Scholz in the Oval Office
on Friday.
Stoltenberg said: "There is no imminent military threat against any ally.
At the same time, we hear regular threats from the Kremlin against NATO
countries."
Russia's invasion of Ukraine nearly two years has shown that "peace in
Europe cannot be taken for granted", the NATO chief said, emphasising the
importance of protecting countries in the alliance.
"As long as we invest in our security and we stay united, we will continue
to deter any aggression," he said.
"NATO does not seek war with Russia, but we need to brace ourselves for
potentially decades of confrontation," he added.
"We monitor closely what Russia does and we have increased our presence in
the eastern part of the alliance," Stoltenberg said.
"If Putin wins in Ukraine, there is no guarantee that Russian aggression
will not spread further. So supporting Ukraine now and investing in NATO's own
capabilities is our best defence."
NATO defence ministers will meet in Brussels on February 15, one week ahead
of the second anniversary of Russia's offensive in Ukraine. A meeting of the
Ukraine Defense Contact Group will be a key feature of the talks.