Jens Stoltenberg: Russia, China, Cyber Attacks and Climate Change Are Main Threats
Politics | February 26, 2021, Friday // 13:00| viewsRussia, China, terrorism, cyber attacks and climate change are the main threats facing NATO and the European Union, said Secretary-General of the North Atlantic Alliance Jens Stoltenberg in his doorstep statement before the video summit of the 27 EU member states in Brussels.
He said that for NATO, the main task during this pandemic has been to make sure that a health crisis doesn't turn into a security crisis, because the threats we are faced with before the pandemic, they are still there.
“Russia's aggressive actions, more brutal forms of terrorism, sophisticated cyberattacks, the rise of China, and the security implications of climate change, so no country or continent can face these challenges alone.
Not Europe alone, not North America alone, but Europe and North America together.
And therefore as you, I welcome the very strong message from the new Biden administration, to rebuild alliances, to strengthen the transatlantic bond. And this will be also the main issue when NATO leaders meet later this year in Brussels.
NATO 2030 is a project where we are looking into how we can further strengthen NATO, the transatlantic bond, and that includes also how we can strengthen the cooperation with the European Union.
And over the last years we have been able to lift the cooperation between the European Union and NATO to unprecedented levels. I appreciate very much your leadership on this, your commitment to NATO-EU cooperation, and I look forward to continuing to working with you and the European Union on issues like resilience, like cyber, like countering the effects of climate change, and also continue to work on issues where we have been working together for many years like stabilising the Western Balkans and tackling migration in the Aegean.
More than 90% of the people living in the European Union, they live in a NATO country. So that just illustrates that we share, pretty much the same population, the same members, and the same neighbourhood and the same challenges. So all of this makes it perfectly, absolutely, obvious that we need to work together, and that's the reason why I'm looking forward to meet with the European Council and to address how we can further strengthen NATO – EU cooperation,” Stoltenberg said in his speech.
European Council President Charles Michel invited Stoltenberg to participate in the second day session of the online summit of EU countries to discuss how to boost the "collective potential to respond to security challenges and threats".
EU leaders and NATO Secretary-General are expected to take the opportunity to discuss and resolve the issue of a joint invitation to Joe Biden to attend the EU-US and NATO-US summit in Brussels. Both organizations have repeatedly commented that they plan to do so in the first half of this year, but so far there is no official invitation.
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