NATO Defense Ministers urge
changes to alliance defense

Jim Garamone

BRUSSELS: Russia’s unprovoked attack on Ukraine has changed the security environment, and the North Atlantic Alliance will change, too, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said at the conclusion of a meeting of alliance defense ministers in Brussels on Wednesday.
Secretary of Defense L-loyd Austin III attended the meeting for the United States.
While Putin’s “war of choice” will force new strategies for the 30 NATO countries, they will reinforce the alliance’s bedrock assumption of collective defense: An attack on one, is an attack on all.
The defense ministers agreed that immediate aid to Ukraine was necessary, and also looked at the steps the alliance is taken to defend NATO countries at risk.
“Moscow should be in no doubt: NATO will not tolerate any attack on allied sovereignty or territorial integrity,” Stoltenberg said during a press conference.
“We have already activated our defense plans to shield the alliance, increase our readiness and deploy troops from both sides of the Atlantic. There are now hundreds of thousands of forces at heightened alert across the alliance, 100,000 U.S. troops in Europe and around 40,000 troops under direct NATO command, mostly in the eastern part of the alliances backed by major air and naval power, as well as air defenses.”
These steps put Russia’s Putin on notice, but more needs to be done, Stolten-berg said. “We must reset our collective defense and deterrence for the longer term,” he said. “Today, we tasked our military commanders to develop options across all domains land, air, sea, cyber and space.”
On land, the new posture should include substantially more forces in the eastern part of the alliance at higher readiness, he said. That should include more prepositioned equipment and supplies for troops to fall in on, should this become necessary. In the air, Stoltenberg called for more allied air power and strengthened integrated air and missile defense. In the maritime environment, he called for carrier strike gro-ups, submarines and significant numbers of combat ships on persistent basis.
“We will also consider the future of cyber defenses and how best to draw on allied space assets,” he said. “We should also train and exercise more often and in greater numbers.”
These changes will requ-ire major investments. He called on all allies to invest a minimum of 2% of gross domestic product on defe-nse. “I welcome that allies such as Germany and Den-mark have already made important announcements on more investments and faster timetables,” he said.
The alliance needs to spend more together. “NATO common funding is the essential enabler that allows us to work together,” he said. “It is a force multiplier for national defense efforts, and it shows solidarity as allies. At this critical moment for our security, unity between North America and Europe in NATO is more important than ever.”