NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg bangs a gavel to signify the start of a meeting of the North Atlantic Council in defense ministers session at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Feb 15, 2024. (PHOTO / AP)
BRUSSELS - The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) sought to further strengthen the bloc's deterrence and defence, and support to Ukraine, at its defence ministers meeting in Brussels on Thursday.
In light of the deteriorating security environment, NATO does not see any "imminent military threat against the Alliance," NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said after the meeting.
We need to shift from the slow pace of peacetime to the high-tempo production demanded by conflict.
Jens Stoltenberg, NATO Secretary General
In terms of defense investment, Stoltenberg said he expected 18 member states to spend 2 percent of their GDP on defense this year, compared to only three members in 2014.
This year, NATO member states in Europe will invest a total of $380 billion in defense, he said.
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"By the end of 2024, European Allies and Canada will have added more than 600 billion dollars for defense since we made the Defence Investment Pledge in 2014," he added.
The ministers also discussed ramping up production of ammunition to support Ukraine, Stoltenberg said. "We need to shift from the slow pace of peacetime to the high-tempo production demanded by conflict."
In the past few months, NATO has agreed on contracts worth 10 billion dollars, he said.
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While some allies are coming together intending to deliver one million drones to Ukraine, 20 members have also agreed to form a demining coalition.
Since the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the United States has provided around 75 billion dollars in military, financial and humanitarian aid to Ukraine, while other NATO member states and partners have provided over 100 billion dollars.
Training center in Poland
Separately, Ukraine and NATO will create a joint training, analytical, and educational center in Poland, the Interfax-Ukraine news agency reported Thursday, citing NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.
Ukraine and NATO will create a joint training, analytical, and educational center in Poland, the Interfax-Ukraine news agency reported
While speaking after a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council in Belgium's capital Brussels, Stoltenberg said that the new facility will be set up in the city of Bydgoszcz in northern Poland.
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"It will enable Ukraine to share lessons learned from Russia's war and will create a structure for Ukrainian forces to learn and train alongside their allied counterparts," he said.
Stoltenberg pledged that NATO would continue to support Ukraine.
The Ukrainian parliament declared rapprochement with NATO as one of the key priorities for Ukraine this year.
The alliance recognized Ukraine as its Enhanced Opportunities Partner in 2020.
NATO, created by 12 countries from Europe and North America in 1949, has 31 member states after several rounds of enlargement.