Fear of further destruction: NATO increases presence in the Baltic Sea
NATO is planning to bolster its presence in the Baltic Sea after the gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia was damaged.
NATO is planning to bolster its presence in the Baltic Sea after the gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia was damaged.
NATO is planning a large-scale exercise involving combat jets capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, expressed concerns about the possible reduction of international support for Kyiv due to the conflict in the Middle East.
Given the Russian aggression against Ukraine, Estonia and Latvia are intensifying their efforts to strengthen their military capabilities. The two Baltic countries, which are members of the EU and NATO, plan to modernize and expand their fleet of military vehicles through joint procurement.
Kyiv’s allies are running low on ammunition they can provide to Ukraine, said Admiral Rob Bauer, Chairman of the NATO Military Committee, at the Warsaw Security Forum on October 3.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan linked his country’s approval of Sweden’s NATO membership to a fighter jet deal with the United States.
After parts of drones were again found in Romania’s Danube Delta, the Foreign Ministry in Bucharest accused Russia of violating the NATO country’s airspace and summoned the Russian ambassador.
Viktor Khrenin, the minister of defense of Belarus, claims that the West is actively making preparations for a direct military confrontation with Russia.
At a panel discussion, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg’s Chief of Staff Stian Jenssen announces a proposed solution to the situation in the Ukraine conflict, according to the Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang.
According to Dutch reports the Danish Air Force intercepted two Russian bombers that were reported to have been moving toward NATO territory.