Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Thursday the trans-Atlantic military alliance is working on the “urgent task” of ensuring Ukraine wins the war, but needs a framework for after the conflict ends.
The comments came following informal talks with the alliance’s foreign ministers on Thursday.
The ministers met in the Norwegian capital of Oslo for a second and final day of informal talks that seek to and defense spending ahead of a NATO leaders summit in Lithuania in July.
What did Stoltenberg say?
The NATO head told reporters that while no decisions were made during the informal talks, all of the alliance’s members agree “Ukraine will become a member of NATO” but the war must come to an end first.
“The most important thing for NATO and Ukraine is to assure that they win this war,” Stoltenberg said. “And we are providing an unprecedented level of support.”
When asked about setting up a concrete set of steps for Ukraine’s NATO accession after the war ends, Stoltenberg said the alliance is working on a framework to ensure Ukraine’s security and the wider security of the rest of Europe.
“We need to stop this vicious circle of aggression against Ukraine,” he told reporters.
He added that NATO needs to create “frameworks to provide the necessary security guarantees” for Ukraine in order “to ensure that President Putin does not do this again.”
Where do NATO’s members stand on Ukraine?
The foreign ministers discussed a range of issues, but the primary focus was on the alliance’s future relationship with Ukraine and what support can be provided
Sweden, whose NATO membership bid has been stalled by resistance from Turkey and Hungary, also took part in the informal discussions in Oslo.
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said the talks in Olso will “set the stage” for the NATO leaders’ summit in July in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius — and that reaching a unified position now is key.
While the alliance agrees on Ukraine’s future membership the question now is how to continue providing support to Ukraine without NATO coming into direct conflict with Russia.
French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said that the alliance now needs to consider what kind of security guarantees NATO can provide Ukraine.
Lithuania and Spain’s foreign ministers both said NATO needs to set out concrete steps for Ukraine’s membership after the war ends.
Sweden’s NATO membership standoff
Another issue high on the list of the foreign ministers talks was
Stoltenberg as well as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and German Foreign Minister Baerbock emphasized that they fully expect Sweden to soon become a member.
“We aim to welcome Sweden as a new NATO member at the Vilnius summit in July,” Baerbock told reporters.
Sweden’s membership bid, however, remains up in the air amid pushback from NATO members Turkey and Hungary.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was reelected on Sunday for another five-year term, has accused Sweden of harboring “terrorists,” particularly members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom said on Thursday that his country had fulfilled “all the commitments” to join NATO.
“It is time for Turkey and Hungary to start the ratification of the Swedish membership to NATO,” he said. “This was never a sprint, it’s a marathon, and we now see the end of it.”
rs/kb (dpa, Reuters)
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