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tv   NATO  Deutsche Welle  April 15, 2024 2:15pm-3:01pm CEST

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to on dw, we ask, is nato able to defend itself? that's up in our documentary after a short break. i'm the coal fairly from all of us here in the newsroom in berlin. thanks so much for coming. via humming does not get drunk. why do gravitational waves squeeze all bodies? how much do we need to put a stop fund print to help find beyond says get smaller. on d, w, science, outtake, talk channel. the nato, the north atlantic treaty organization was formed to 75 years ago. it's aim
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to prevent war between solver and countries, the 75 years of europe and history without a war. that's the ultimate expression of a successful alliance. then, on february 24th 2022. russia launched a full scale invasion of ukraine. war had returned to europe. ukraine itself is not a needle member, but russia's actions have prompted the question. is the western military alliance capable of defending itself? how strong is nato? the russian president vladimir putin viewed the eastern expansion of nato as both
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a threat and betrayal of a purported promise and booting size. it was a breach of trust that justified russia's attack on another country. he made that clear and an address to the nation 3 days before a russian troops invaded ukraine. the scene is gonna be just keep close enough to diagnose loaner cars based on a need, but i would like that i substitute system wide decision. you does a pessimist is a project, right? and they say they're given sort of, i mean we were supposed to be speaking into that process, the motions. so similar to what are the number one key, this is daniel crane. i'm not that it's a pretty my i think it was like, is it possible for me to get to the senior this is like by the master. so yeah, no, it seems like seems like uh, what kind of shows that they should get something even though some got new coming up. so for those of us, you do need you get a minute. so you can look at what's the cost on the sample. i addition to you, please, i do it as best,
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but i knew you didn't see any like him. the piece was to be a map that you might be doing. must pushed in the bar when he is still meeting, yet you don't mind your customer sitting in your way. and the other thing is that nothing noise is that's about not one inch east towards. that's the much quoted promise, nato is said to have made russia so did the west to betray russia as story. and mary isa reality has spent most of her academic life focusing on that exact question. she's conducted more than $100.00 interviews and scrutinized countless transcripts letters and documents. and ultimately, she found a clear answer. what i would really like would be if the russians would lay down their weapons and go home. i can't make that happen. but in a certain sense, putting this, trying to use history is a weapon to justify what he's doing. and i am a historians. and so in my own little way,
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it's very minor compared to what the premiums are doing. but in my own little way, i can perhaps take that weapon away from him by showing and a serious, reproducible scholarly way. the true narrative, the actual narrative of what happened. the story begins shortly after the fall of the berlin wall. germany was on the brink of reunification, but there was a challenge. germany had surrendered unconditionally after the 2nd world war. so the foreign victor powers of the us, france, britain and the soviet union still had undisputed legal rights over divided germany and particularly over divided berlin. so in order for germany to unify, all 4 had to give those powers up. the 3 victorious western powers ask themselves what the 4th power would demand. what would the soviet union's last liter mikhail gorbachev want in return for allowing the reunification of germany
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the the former west german foreign minister hans dietrich denture was, was certain that corporate charles would want the security of knowing and dentures words that neither poland nor hungary is going to join nato, so venture thought that was reasonable and felt strongly that the western allies, so america, britain, france, and west germany should offer that to gorbachev. denture, propose the idea to us secretary of state james baker. he too thought it was reasonable. on february 9th 1990 baker visited gorbachev at the kremlin and he says roughly the following. how about you let your part of germany go. and we say that nato nato, in its jurisdiction, will move not one into sports. after the meeting,
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baker flew back to the us to report back to his boss and a good friend, president george h. w. bush. bush, however, was anything but impressed with the proposal, the bush says, jim, i'm disappointed in you. i don't think we should negotiate about the future of nato . i think nato just won the cold war. i think nato is great just the way it is. so we're not going to do that. and you need to let people know. so one of my more interesting discoveries was a letter that baker then wrote to the west german 4 and ministry at the end of february, saying, i'm sorry, i should have said that i've caused confusion. we need to stop talking about this. and after that, this offer disappears from the american negotiating position. 2 weeks later, bush invited west german chancellor, helmut kohl and his wife to camp david the us presidents, country residence bush said to
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call pretty much the same thing. but he said to james baker, we're not going to negotiate or the future of nato to help with that. or that's a direct quote to help with that. and coal responded okay. but corporate job is going to want something in exchange for his burdening chance and goals. coal thought about it and said, perhaps it will be a question of money. and bush responded. you have deep pockets. and the later defense minister bob gates, who was basically taking notes around this time, he bob gates later wrote in his memoirs, at that moment the strategy became clear. we were going to bribe the soviets out, but with money not with promises about native american. the 2 plus for negotiations dragged on until september 12th 1990 by then nothing stood in the way of german reunification and the line not one inch eastward was not in any treaty.
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storage is assembly vague and they'll tell you one does the for i need them to judge. so and then by talk real, feel 72. it even guns old. this was not an amateur. our, these were professionals negotiating. this was the a team is we say in america, and at the end, what actually was in the contract explicitly allows nato to enlarge across the former cold war front line. that i believe is what is most important. and the soviet union not only signed that accord, not only ratified it, but also cashed the associated check from billions of deutsch marks. that doesn't mention. so what, who does is he mentioned the early phase when a go, she ations where that was a possibility. but then he ignores what actually happened to the end. months later,
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the soviet union collapsed. the warsaw pact was officially dissolved. the soviet flag over the kremlin was lowered nato when the west had one. suddenly the question arose. what should they don't do next? month after 1990, there was this idea of the peace of and all states in europe in the west, but also russia and other former soviet states reduce their arms. the idea was if everyone had to your weapons, it signaled nobody wanted conflict in that one's view of one kind of conflict. and for a few years at least, the idea seemed to work. relations between russia and the west improved in 1997 leaders of nato countries and russian president boris yeltsin, signed a cooperation agreement called the nato, russia of founding act. german diplomatic. both gong issue was after negotiations, give it to you. in the 1st half of the 1990s,
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the relationship was by no means confrontational or hostile. the russian needed cooperation with the west of a rush. it was later admitted to the g 7. and so suddenly we were the g 8 of going on, but see by the us the nato, russia founding act, literally states, nato and russia. do not consider each other as adversaries there for me. and we will still be even in the spot who is like apps on ok. but see it if don't see it. i see it tools tend to be too bad or, you know, or, you know, nobody ever walked in the founding that the west made concessions to rush out just because of didn't give you, couldn't we agreed that no nuclear weapons would be deployed on the territory a future, eastern natal member states, go to a period and go to boat. so i wouldn't even know if sort by this, by doing the accept you. we also accepted that the deployment of troops from nato
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member states in those countries would only be allowed to take place in a very limited way. so there's stuff in dawson and tomato honor. that agreement says andre courts who not academic director of the russian international affairs council in moscow. the, the license too young to me or do i agree that between 20142022 the north atlantic treaty organization showed us such and restraint. a yacht, people all up the years unless those because side side of the machine, you know, the restraints in deploying new troops and heavy weapons to its eastern flank to roll. it would really not for you all of us pushing of long here at the below. this was evidently done to avoid any accusation of violating the provisions of the nato
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russia of founding act as little guys to uh, the uh, the right. see not the category the act does not allow the parties to station launch off most of weapons along the russian border. i don't see any police simply because they get the most one. on the other hand, russia is doing things very differently. to me this nuclear, we have to assume that there are nuclear capable missile systems and a couple in, in grad, which wouldn't get much warning to us sitting here in berlin. here a lot is happening, they're passing it i because we haven't done any of that needs. we haven't done anything in this domain that didn't already exist before reunification or during the cold war exist yet. even when food in came to power in 1999, the relationship between russia and nato was peaceful. the old enemy seemed to have become a friend. meanwhile, a new adversary had emerged. terrorism to this day,
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the alliance is article 5 has only ever been invoked once. following the terrorist attacks of september, 11th, 2001. today, our fellow citizens, our way of life. our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts. the pictures of airplanes flying into buildings, fires, burning huge, huge structures. collapsing have filled us with disbelief. at the time stephanie bobs was a nato security adviser at headquarters in brussels, watching as events unfolded the as gab down much oh, do you forced along during the attacks but also off too. it's there was a sense that we should expect to find them or tax flights of an i'm to go through and we didn't know why on. and i remember very well how unsettled we felt as
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employees at nato headquarters up to use. okay, we so we will also target, we haven't even 5 target intended. so again, if it was directed from abroad, i didn't see, and i did see it shall be regardless as an x and the top of the size of the washington. and to find, find us easy, clean that regard. there was a considerable risk and insight king obstacle, 5 pieces by china because nobody knew what the situation would be like in a week's time of their kindergarten button. and whether the americans would suddenly demand immediate military support from that route lice. and nobody could know that for ca, tile is off to the attacks. then i'm just leaving newman sung in response to the attacks us president george w bush declared a war on terror and $2170.00 nations took part in the subsequent war in afghanistan,
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including all nato countries and russia. a few days after the attacks put in speaking german address to the german parliament in berlin, who did the other. the other is foods and was one of the very 1st to express his condolences and a willingness to help after 911. that's relations were still stable. back then w, the when the of the other day i'm going to have an undefined and haven't, who does the unites of placing. usually that was so difficult for them to be dealing with shoots in his own thing and gave them to them and kind of because i spoke with you, it's from september in the, in the time to finish talking to she is one of in plus mentioned in the guns, severely foggins, this is this will come and come with we have that on this issue. the desk of dentistry dixon for an interview. the political that you're leaving. right. so i
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think that this is doing this because i know 5 michelle new in duplicate. how do you get a model? can you give them? i know notes with poland. ready food and supported nato in afghanistan in the fight against dow, kinda some of nato's logistics were routed via russia at the time, putting even considered the prospect of russia joining nato. the . ready ready both russia and nato member states benefit from the cooperation economically and politically. the non you probably, and you have certainly used to move a very much. it was a very good cooperation between the west and russia dollars, essentially in the early 2, thousands a year. and then the, well yeah, yeah,
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complete get that goes out to wouldn't to are the best example is probably the transportation options that russia offered nato during the war in afghanistan. or are you also posting that y'all a while your neck? they're not the so called the northern transport car dog. well, well, so several years you're going to need the prospect. me give me a book. it proved to be very effective as you can get the category of option. because also, if it's even from 2000 to onwards, representatives of russia and nato met regularly in the nato, russia council. the mood among leaders was playful and up at the more like a set the minute the step. quite a few of them, i think even though i just don't study at the go much do, i think the
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slippery slope to the i think started to go downhill with the us decision to intervene in iraq. if not before then gosh and try to. because moscow of course had the feeling that a red line had been crossed. oh yes is. and you know what you knew it was written in the americans. we're going to start that kind of war means you get the with thousands of tanks and soldiers. and as it turned out, the based on false information and then where, what it ends on it is. it was investing, and it was the beginning of the end of good relations between russia and the west. russia, like china and france voted against the invasion of a rock at the un security council. the us invaded any way without a un mandate in 2007, 4 years after the us invaded iraq with its coalition of the willing. booting spoke at the munich security conference. he took the united states and its
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allies to task over their policies, the front of my computer. you'll see that you'll see it was more list, it is these new book. but if this a new upgrade, you me to go to google in it, but yet let me know what's the diploma? just give me something it does up with the some fox in the what is the fact that contact was maintained between moscow and brussels was very often seen as some kind of stave from nato. to one's russia very near a couple of a r c, a pull would show us as the council was almost exclusively considered a mechanism for exchanging information, but one which had no serious decision making functions. uh you got you. uh and of course with those 2 approaches were bound to clash sooner or later that you dropbox
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for the around the new port. not those little bit of salt mode. so we can still void shipping a. but it's a little while ago shipping a bit moves and the problem most of ideally, normally the bus will get you, then you've just came up with a lot. and then what was that? did you feel better? so you almost doesn't finish out of the list late, that's something that i need to do. let's just see it. or if you look on the mac, you've probably to implement that and i see it in maybe else. so it's under again because of the look i'm with the front of it. come with the finance of actually, physically, i guess we probably reacted unwisely. zillow, the reaction was basically to assume he just needed to let off some steam. for the next morning, it would be back to business as usual, that turned out to be a miscalculation in the field. so we found that out in 2008 at the latest. i mean, when russia responded to the george and uprisings with massive military force,
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me to tell them after that, when things really went downhill. nicholas, and set it back up in the, in 2014 russian forces occupied crimea. pro russian insurgents and eastern ukraine were supported with arms supplies, logistics, and irregular forces. the official line was that moscow was protecting the russian language and culture. in reality, it was probably also about preventing ukraine from joining nato. after all, no country involved in a conflict is allowed to join the alliance. who should face? brain would follow in 2022. the
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rushes for administer essentially declared that the nato, russia council was no more they want to go back to the borders of 1997. they sent a concept tree to text them later in december 2021. and that means that the basically all the members that since 1997 has become a member of nato, would sort of become a 2nd to a class member. of course that is unacceptable. who wants less of nato instead? he's getting more of it. finland joining the alliance in 2023 suite and applied for membership in 2022, but wasn't admitted at 1st. for 20 months turkish president rush of type air to one block, sweden's membership that hungary opposed to even longer only to members have the right to veto. for example,
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when it comes to new member states as a distribution, obviously shirts which is so sweet and had been preparing for over a year and dropping. they made an incredibly important, really quite 2 story decisions. they had to get it through parliament, which was a difficult political fate, inclusive, the sister from that they were more or less dependent on 2 people, missed the oven and missed the other one and all bundled. so they were on the doorstep and they basically had to beg quotes. i told them bitches. research, are you guys out? dean says everyone has deliberately used nato to make profitable deals for years. and his role at the german institute for international and security affairs id and as observed the turkeys foreign policy of there's a set off. and there's also a tactical reason for the turkish position with turkey wants to extort more benefits. so to the us, if you want to put it that way, and this was i kind of a scheme, it's about acquiring at 16 fighter jets, for example, jets. turkey isn't going to make it easy. i mean,
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the country is negotiating this one to 100. meanwhile, nato once again faces an age old question. how united with the alliance be in the event of an attack. polling suggests that nearly 3 quarters of turks now see it's nato partner the united states as their greatest threat. nato itself now has just 23 percent support in turkey. nato is most important member was and is the us. it's key to the alliance of strength and its future. we assembled here today are issuing a new degree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital and in every hall of power. from this day forward, a new vision will govern our land. from this day forward, it's going to be only america. first, america,
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1st of the united states plays an extremely important coordinating role in nato. the president is the most important person in the alliance and without an american president and all of that means in terms of american military and nuclear power. the, the, the alliance itself would be just a shadow of itself. good. in july 2018. nato secretary general young sheldon bag and us president donald trump clashed on camera at the nato summit and brussels. germany is just paying a little bit over one percent. whereas the united states and actual numbers is paying for point 2 percent of a much larger g d p. so i think that's inappropriate or, you know,
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we're protecting germany, we're protecting france, we're protecting everybody. and yet we're paying a lot of money to protect. now this has been going on for decades, and the numerous of the countries go out and make a pipeline deal with russia, where they're paying billions of dollars into the coffers of russia. and i think that's very inappropriate. and the former chancellor of germany is the head of the pipeline company that supplying the gas in 2014 nato member states agreed to spend a 2 percent of gdp on defense. but apart from the united states modeling, any countries stuck to it, the john bolton was us national security advisor for around 18 months under donald trump until the president forced him to resign. when i took the job, this national security advisor, i believe that the weight of the decisions that the president had to make and the
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national security field, the gravity of the responsibility would weigh on donald trump and discipline him in the same way it had for 44 american presidents before him. bolton was there on the 2nd day of the nato summit, when trump nearly caused a major incident. the while i was in a car over to our embassy residence in brussels, where the president was staying and he called me in the car and said, i think we should do something historic today. i think we should withdraw from nato . and i said, somewhat surprised by that i said, well, let's discuss it. i'm almost there. as soon as i hung up at the present minute i called the mike pompei o the secretary of state and called john kelly white house chief of staff. i tried to reach matt as the secretary of defense, to basically say, all hands on deck. i think this is very serious
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the for the 1st time and need those history. us withdrawal seemed a real possibility. the, well, i was very worried that the trump would actually announce with wrong right there. not that we had considered it, not that we had discussed it at the n. s c a. but because trump, once he started talking about something, i often just went ahead and did it. and at one point trump said to me that basically he was going to replace me with someone who didn't argue with him. but who just said yes, when he said things like, i want to get out of nato. the last conversation i had was, and he was literally sitting at the big table in the nato meeting room. he called me up and said, well, shall we do it?
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and i said, go right up to the line, but don't go over the line. and then i went and sat back down. and when i set down, i had no prediction. what he would do the, i think with a normal president, it would have been seen as a blog because people know that come on the united states needs nato, just as much as nato needs the united states. so nobody would have taken him serious. he comes across is not truly appreciating the significance of the alliance or what it even means or understanding the history or why do we do what we do. he, he understands the world and then transactional sense. quit pro crow vin each. if i give you secure, is he what do i get in return? why do i have it was deal when it comes to nature. he didn't appreciate that nature was impose and for the us in order to create global stability and security for him
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. it's just to do that. but can you give me this and i'll give you that. that's what nato is about surface the mission of, of, of the not to do nothing came of trumps threats. but nato allies, especially those in europe. we're concerned me. berlin july 2019 simulation was carried out by london's international institute for strategic studies and the carpet foundation. security experts from germany, france, the u. k. poland, and the us to part. everything happened in secret. neither the location nor the participants were disclosed. the executive director of international affairs at the club foundation by jesus and i am of them is a sole task for the scenario exercises we invite and government officials but also
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people from the academic world and from think tanks of the think tank that i was for sure, they come from various countries that are relevant for the scenario we're playing out. you and then the funds and a and a very important requirement. and these simulation games is that the list of participants remains absolutely confidential. student fatality type. the technician scenario was this. during a 2nd, trump presidency, the us announces its withdrawal from nato. it was in the military scenario. it was a political one. what concessions with the remaining member states be prepared to make. with nato even collapse under the strain of the us threat. as of the start, your team about details for hyatt of a german team was quite prepared to throw the issue of trade policy into the equation, voc charlottesville for the pulling volume. and the polish team was relatively quick to enter into talks with the americans along the lines of hey hey,
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what can we do beyond nato, in terms of a bilateral security policy agreements, be that to are, and in the z shots pretty to should fine boned. so send that, of course was actually a concern for the other players in the game. yeah. and then up to in these, infuse then then the and because we start making bilateral security agreements with the west. and that the structure you know, will be undermined to the us to not tool i spoke to that or she went on the new to that and what they expected would happen. but it was a return to a series of bilateral alliance as alliances between 2 states. maybe 3 states in europe, and what they saw was the return to rickety system of alliances like those that had existed in europe before the 2nd world war. and then in some cases before the 1st world war 2, and they worried that this would be a very unstable and dangerous situation, where states would have
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a series of different security obligations that could activate a whole series of dominos, if you will, if a conflict where to begin, the scenario secretly played out in berlin in 2019 became relevant once more in 2024. trump has repeatedly made nato an election issue and his campaign appearances the and we don't get so much out of it. and you know, i hate to tell you this about nato. if we ever needed the help, let's say we were attacked. i don't believe they'd be there. i very much fear if he becomes president again, he will withdraw from data. but he will probably also band and ukraine, that who knows what else he will do. i think it will be very destructive, very counterproductive. i think that the trump will withdraw from nato because he has felt for so long. but it was something he wanted to do. i think he feels
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frustrated that he wasn't able to do it. in his 1st term. he probably blames people like myself and several others and, and try in a 2nd. trump term. he will not be burdened by people like me. i can tell you. they asked me that question one of the presidents of, of the countries that upset. well sir, uh if we don't pay and were attacked by russia, will you protect us? i said you didn't pay your delinquent. you said yes. let's say that happened. no, i would not protect you. in fact, i would encourage them to do whatever the hell they want. so you gotta say, gotta pay your bill. and the money came flowing in. we were like the stupid country of the world and we're not going to be the stupid country of the world any longer. we're not going to be the to see if the real danger isn't unofficial us withdrawal from nato. that was,
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that's something that congress made clear again in 2019 with legislation on some of my daughters. you must have the president does not have the power to break the north atlantic treaty suppression. fatiguing treaties have to go through congress if she could. 5. that's the police. a real danger is a lack of political will to do anything. in the case of an ally being attacked by whether the president and the white house is trump, or someone else, i've been given it. even if the trump is re elected and doesn't officially withdrawal from nato. because the us congress doesn't allow him to come, because still decide to do nothing. if an attack takes place. by putting him on a computer, the us congress would still have the power to disable. but the us presidents from as military commander could simply not send troops from the i could the world's largest military alliance, and it's famous article 5 be undermined by just one person. and that's not the only
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threat to nato global power dynamics have been shifting for years to life. and i think for one thing us society is changing some of that. but also in recent years, there's been a dramatic increase in the perception that china is a threat. we own a global play of that could take on the us under the category rushes and a completely different category. when it comes to that, according to the global fire power index, china is ranked just after the united states and russia when it comes to military strength and world wide. modernization of beijing is military is set to be completed by 2035 plus china already has the largest navy in the world. satellite images from recent years show how china has build up huge military bases on small on developed ad holes in the south. china sea in china is taking an increasingly aggressive stance towards taiwan and other agents dates. those
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dates are internal, also hoping for assistance from the us and nato. these even though we're also seeing this with you claim increasingly the question is, can we be equally active and both sides see it says in both regions. nice. and that's with now spending on ukraine in terms of weapons and supports. should we already be supplying that to tie $12.00, in case of a conflict from success databases going on in the us commuting types of apps. pnc 5 titles and i wasn't part of a delegation to the us in 20. 19. during our discussions, the americans told us russia 0 problem and it's a european problem. now, he's not ours anymore. you have to take care of it. and that's, that's not going to change. even if and 10 or 20 years, we have better relations with russia until then, your parents have to come to terms with the idea that the us may simply not be able
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to act in the conflict. because they may be busy elsewhere. the ones that are on the mantel challenge for europeans in the future will be to show how they can also be useful and not just the beneficiary of us security. or is there a need for a plan be like a unified european army after role article $42.00 of the treaty on european union contains its own mutual assistance guarantees similar to nato's article 5 unlimited seems needless to say, the us wouldn't be the military power. it is today if it wasn't centralized, and that's exactly why a european army under a unified command structure is so unlikely, because we're not one country like the united states. you have leucon of the european union is made up of 27 countries mind. they will never let us central command in brussels, for example,
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take military decision making out of the center. and it's a time come understand the implicit somebody in february 2024 european commission president also to fund the lion support in a proposal to appoint an e u. defense commissioner in the future. but the idea of a european army would have to be approached over the long term, the a festival. what the europeans can do is a line the army so that they are complementary, so that they work together. they still wouldn't achieve the necessary level of deterrence against russia, but at least they'd have a foundation on which they could carry out small to medium sized emissions on their own. and if you want to tape, fuel small to medium sized dimensions are unlikely to discourage russia in the long term. in january 2024, nato began its largest truth exercise since the end of the cold war named steadfast
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defender, 90000 soldiers practicing their reaction to a simulated attack. over several months, the hypothetical opponent, russia, the united kingdom diplomat had said essentially, every time nato gets into trouble, the russians come along and save it was what you deal, not as he just nato is now. in fact, returning to the reason the north atlantic bulk was founded in 1949 else of the keeping moscow, a bay of z. everyone, you must do it. whether poor likes it or not. russia's war and ukraine has reinvigorated nato. the is think is, is the good to your opinions and of course is gemini, it's the biggest test that we have faced since the end of the 2nd world war. this
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is not some minor crisis that we can manage from the side lisles. it's some kind of minutes and regardless of external pressure, the looming rift between europe and the us is unmistakable. europeans are facing completely new challenges. a side because the ministry power of all european states put together. i simply too small compared to what the us has creating a european defense policy that could function without nato would take decades. not to mention require much more than the 2 percent of g d p. that's being demanded today. would escape just providing the money isn't enough. things have to be produced. weapon systems would have to be made the kind you up kind of the dream of today kind of would get some help with the post cold war piece. dividend seems to have been used up. the defense is once again,
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part of every day political discourse been for meaningful. i have a family, a lot of us here. our fathers and mothers, we don't want more than, you know, it's the very thing we want to prevent the guns and beat. so how can it be prevented? a, so the by 1st caring for something like it to me and by sending a message to somebody who just over a year ago, carried out an attack on a neighbor he piece by saying get orders to that won't work here. so i'm here to house, kind of like after 75 years, nato is once again confronting the task it faced when it was found in preventing a war the
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this week we are the library as capital old ones over us. the concept of the, for the nation should tell me a little bit about that. there are rules, prescribe to men this minute and remember that we've been behind me. i really think you will know that the men's federal rule, women's, potentially is waived. just taking care of who i believe the minute the weekend, same or the 77 percent. 30 minutes on the w using mind. power train is paraplegics to walk again.
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is this the beginning of a new medical error? the research team is just getting started. tamara today in 90 minutes on d w. the words people have to say that's why we listen. because every weekend on d w the
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is the state of the news life from berlin. israel's allies urge restraint as the country considers how to respond to a ron's unprecedented aerial attack. prime minister netanyahu meets with his war cabinets and then says that the conflict is not over. iran calls it's wave of missiles and drones measured and justified by the u. s. warrants it won't join any retaliatory operations, also coming up new stabbing shocks, australia, a religious leader is attacked during service. this comes on the day of morning for the victims of last week's 9 rapids that left 6 people that.

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