BRUSSELS (Reuters) – NATO leaders will meet in Vilnius on July 11-12 to tackle a wide range of topics, from divisions over Ukraine’s membership bid and Sweden’s accession to boosting ammunitions stockpiles and reviewing the first defence plans in decades.
It will be the fourth NATO summit since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with the first held virtually on Feb. 25, 2022, just one day after the attack, followed by meetings in Brussels and in Madrid.
The extraordinary flurry of gatherings stands in contrast to the previous rhythm of annual NATO summits and shows how war on its doorstep has brought the alliance back into focus.
Security measures in Vilnius will be high, with three German Patriot air defence units deployed to protect the venue, a first for a NATO summit.
Additional fighter jets will patrol the skies of Lithuania, which is wedged between the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad and Belarus and has long been seen as a vulnerable spot on NATO’s eastern flank.
Following is a list of the main issues to be discussed in Vilnius:
UKRAINE MEMBERSHIP
The summit looks set to be dominated by how NATO will define its future relationship with Ukraine, amid repeated calls by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy for Kyiv to receive an invitation into the alliance at Vilnius.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has made clear that Kyiv will not become a member while the war goes on, and that the Vilnius summit will not issue a formal invitation, either.
Still, allies are divided over how swiftly Ukraine should be allowed to join after fighting ends.
While eastern European countries say a road map should be offered to Kyiv at the summit, the United States and Germany are wary of any move that might take the alliance closer to war with Russia.
In the run-up to Vilnius, more countries have backed a British proposal to allow Kyiv to skip the so-called Membership Action Plan (MAP) programme that sets out political, economic and military targets candidates have to meet and that other eastern European nations had to pass before joining NATO.
With such a move, the alliance could address demands to go beyond the declaration of the Bucharest summit in 2008, which said Ukraine would become a member eventually, without offering Kyiv an actual invitation or timetable.
NATO is also likely to find a stronger wording than 2008 to underscore Kyiv’s perspective for joining the alliance.
Leaders could agree upon something like “Ukraine’s rightful place is in NATO”, echoing remarks by Stoltenberg on a visit to Kyiv in April, or stress that “trans-Atlantic security would be incomplete without Ukraine”.
SECURITY ASSURANCES FOR UKRAINE
Leaders are expected to discuss what security assurances Kyiv should get for the time after the war, even though these pledges will be bilateral and not issued by the alliance itself.
They will likely include the promise of continued military and financial aid to Kyiv to deter Russia from a renewed attack once the war has ended.
Stoltenberg has underlined that NATO – under Article 5 of the Washington Treaty – will provide full-fledged security guarantees to full members of the alliance only.
BOLSTERING NATO’S EASTERN FLANK
Leaders will review the first defence plans the alliance has drawn up since the Cold War, detailing how NATO would respond to a Russian attack.
The revival of the so-called regional plans signifies a fundamental shift. With the plans, the alliance also gives nations guidance on how to upgrade their forces and logistics.
NATO had seen no need for large-scale defence plans for decades but with Europe’s bloodiest war since 1945 raging just beyond its borders in Ukraine, it is now warning that it must have all planning in place well before a conflict with a peer adversary such as Moscow might erupt.
Turkey has been blocking approval of the plans over the wording of geographical locations such as Cyprus. The issue will be left for leaders to solve unless allies find agreement before the summit.
NATO will also raise targets for the stockpiling of ammunitions as Kyiv is burning through shells much faster than Western countries can produce them, and after more than a year of conflict in Ukraine has left allied stocks badly depleted.
At the same time, allies will show how they aim to implement NATO’s goal, agreed at last year’s Madrid summit, of putting over 300,000 troops on high alert, up from 40,000 in the past, to counter Russia.
SWEDEN
NATO had been aiming to welcome Sweden as the 32nd member of the alliance in Vilnius but Turkey is still blocking Stockholm’s accession.
Allies hope that Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan will lift his opposition at the summit but it is unclear whether this will happen.
Ankara accuses Sweden of harbouring members of militant groups on its territory and says it must crack down on them before it can join NATO.
UPGRADING NATO’S 2% MILITARY SPENDING TARGET
Stoltenberg aims to make NATO’s current military spending target of 2% of the national GDP a minimum requirement rather than a goal to aim for.
But in 2022, even the old target was met by less than a quarter of the then 30 members of the alliance, according to estimates published by NATO in March. The goal was set in 2014, when NATO leaders agreed to increase spending towards 2% of their GDP on defence within a decade.
NATO’s annual report showed Greece, the United States, Lithuania, Poland, Britain, Estonia and Latvia met the target. Bringing up the rear were Belgium, Spain and Luxembourg, whose defence spending was under 1.2% of GDP.
(Reporting by Sabine Siebold)