NATO’s new plans will help to better defend ‘every inch’ of allied territory, Cavoli says
By
JOHN VANDIVER
STARS AND STRIPES • May
10, 2023
NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg, center, is flanked by alliance defense officials at NATO headquarters
in Brussels on May 10, 2023. Representatives of member countries met Wednesday
to fine-tune new defense strategies that are expected to transform how NATO
will defend itself. (NATO)
STUTTGART, Germany
— U.S. European Command’s Gen. Christopher Cavoli and other top NATO defense
officials met Wednesday in Brussels to fine-tune new defense plans for Europe
that are expected to transform how the alliance will defend itself for years to
come.
The meeting came
ahead of a summit this summer in Vilnius, Lithuania, where heads of state are
expected to formally approve a strategy that NATO commanders have been
hammering away at since the last summit in Madrid a year earlier.
Tailored regional
defense plans will strengthen and update the ways allies deter and defend, NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said at the start of talks at alliance
headquarters Wednesday.
The plans “provide a much more precise requirement for what is needed to help transform our militaries so allies will know exactly what forces and capabilities are needed, including where, what and how to deploy,” he said.
The defense plans
will call for more troops at higher levels of ready-to-deploy forces who can
mobilize on short notice, military officials said.
“This change will
move us from an alliance that was optimized for out-of-area contingency
operations to an alliance fit for the purpose of large-scale operations to
defend every inch of the alliance's territory,” Cavoli said Wednesday. “This is
necessitated by the new realities we face.”
To bring all the
defense plans to fruition, allies will need to invest sufficiently in relevant
military capabilities.
Increasing defense
spending among members has long been a NATO priority. In Vilnius, members are
expected to raise spending targets for members, making the current 2% of gross
domestic product benchmark a bare minimum.
Cavoli, who serves
in the dual-hatted role of EUCOM chief and NATO supreme allied commander in
Europe, said new capability requirements are going to be spelled out for allies
with unprecedented specificity.
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