Ukraine

NATO chief slams Trump’s threat to abandon allies

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg commented on US presidential candidate Donald Trump’s recent statements in which he questioned the US intention to defend other NATO allies, the European Pravda reported.

During an election rally in South Carolina (USA) on 10 February 2024, Donald Trump said that he would encourage Russians to do whatever they want to any NATO member country that does not meet spending guidelines on defense and would not abide by NATO’s collective defense clause if reelected.

Ahead of the meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels on 14 February, Jens Stoltenberg assured that all NATO countries are committed to common defense.

“NATO’s idea and focus is to prevent war. Any suggestion that we will not defend each other undermines our security. My message is that there is no need to undermine our deterrence system. We have no doubt about our readiness to defend our allies,” Jens Stoltenberg said.

Commenting on Donald Trump’s recent controversial statements, Stoltenberg said that “NATO has been able to prevent an attack on the Alliance for 75 years” and that all current NATO governments are now emphasizing the inviolability of the principle of common defense.

According to Stoltenberg, the main strength of the Alliance is the principle of deterrence, which is based on the fact that adversaries are confident in a joint NATO response in the event of an attack on any member. Abandoning this principle destroys the Alliance’s strength, Stoltenberg said.

According to NATO’s Article Five, if a NATO ally is the victim of an armed attack, every other member of the Alliance will consider this act of violence as an armed attack against all members and will take action to assist the ally attacked.

At present, NATO has 31 member countries, including the United States. NATO was created by 12 countries from Europe and North America on 4 April 1949.

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