NATO needs to take ‘serious steps,’ says Zelenskyy as Trudeau, allies meet on Ukraine

24 Mar 2022 | Ukraine | 361 |
NATO needs to take ‘serious steps,’ says Zelenskyy as Trudeau, allies meet on Ukraine

The latest updates as of 8:30 a.m. ET on Thursday:

Canada and its NATO allies need to increase military support for Ukraine as it defends against an invading Russian army, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Thursday.

In a pre-recorded video address to a NATO emergency summit, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attended, Zelenskyy warned Russia poses a threat to NATO nations in eastern Europe.

Russia “wants to go further. Against eastern members of NATO. The Baltic states. Poland for sure,” Zelenskyy said.

“But NATO has yet to show what the alliance can do to save people.”

Zelenskyy added Ukraine wants NATO to supply it with tanks, planes and anti-ship weapons.

“You can give us one per cent of all your aircraft. One per cent of all your tanks. One per cent!” he said.

“We can’t just buy it. Such a supply directly depends only on NATO’s decisions, on political decisions, by the way.”

Earlier in an video address to Ukraine, Zelenskyy said that Thursday will prove to be a day in which the country’s true allies emerge.

“At these three summits we will see who is our friend, who is our partner and who sold us out and betrayed us,” Zelenskyy said. The G7 and European Union are also meeting on Thursday.

Before the NATO summit began, Trudeau insisted NATO is not just a geographical alliance, but a “group of countries who stand together because we believe in democracy, in the rule of law, in the defence of human rights and the values that underpin all of our societies.”

He added that the “illegal, brutal” invasion by Russia is unacceptable and NATO is “united” in the alliance’s support for Ukraine and condemnation of the continued attacks on the eastern European country.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine one month ago on Feb. 24 has left Europe facing its biggest security threat since the Second World War, and according to Trudeau on Wednesday, a larger threat to the globe.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the military alliance is set to green light sending more troops to the eastern part of Europe as part of talks to reset the alliance’s long-term deterrence and defence posture.

Ahead of the summit, Stoltenberg spoke to the media, calling the ongoing invasion of Ukraine by Russia the “most serious security crisis in a generation.” He added that this summit was a need for a “reset” in NATO’s operations.

“We need to do more and therefore we need to invest more and there is a new sense of urgency,” he said.

Regarding goals for the summit, Stoltenberg said NATO allies need to show unity and “address this security crisis together.” He anticipated that the allies would declare greater financial commitments to defence spending.

On Wednesday, in a news conference in Brussels, Stoltenberg told reporters that he expects the leaders to sign off on the deployment of four new battlegroups in Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia.

“I expect leaders will agree to strengthen NATO’s posture in all domains, with major increases in the eastern part of the alliance on land, in the air and at sea,” he said.

The new multinational battlegroups come on top of four existing combat units with roughly 5,000 troops operating in three Baltic states and Poland. They were deployed after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014.

Canada and its allies are expected to unveil later Thursday a new round of economic sanctions against the allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday accused Russia of crossing a red line into barbarism in its war with Ukraine and said the West needed to “tighten the vice” in sanctions to bring the conflict to an end.

“Vladimir Putin has already crossed the red line into barbarism,” Johnson told reporters on arrival in Brussels.

He said more sanctions need to be imposed.

“It is very important we work together to get this thing done. The harder our sanctions … the more we can do to help Ukraine … the faster this thing can be over.”

Trudeau toured Europe two weeks ago, where he held meetings in London, Berlin, Warsaw and Poland, and visited Canadian troops leading a NATO multinational battlegroup in Latvia.

Trudeau will face pressure to boost Canada’s defence budget, which according to NATO estimates stood at 1.39 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product in 2021.

Russia’s war on Ukraine has stalled on most fronts. Russia has failed to capture a single major Ukrainian city, seize the capital Kyiv, or swiftly topple Zelenskyy’s government.

Russia calls the war, which is the biggest attack on a European state since the Second World War, a “special military operation” to disarm Ukraine and protect it from “Nazis.”

The West describes it as a false pretext for an unprovoked war of aggression to subdue a country Russian President Vladimir Putin describes as illegitimate.

Peace talks have been ongoing throughout the war, but have yet to produce any breakthroughs.

— with files from The Canadian Press and Reuters.

by Global News