Friday, November 15, 2024

NATO summit to discuss with Indo-Pacific partners resilience, cybersecurity, disinformation: US official

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The flags of member counties of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) are seen in Brussels, in this Oct. 21, 2021 photo. AFP-Yonhap

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and its Indo-Pacific partners, including South Korea, plan to discuss resilience, support for Ukraine, disinformation, cybersecurity and emerging technologies during their summit in Washington next week, a senior U.S. administration official said Friday.

The NATO Summit is set to take place in the U.S. capital from Tuesday through Thursday. The leaders of the alliance’s four Indo-Pacific partners (IP4) — South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and Japan — have been invited to the summit that marks the 75th anniversary of NATO’s founding.

“We are bringing together some of our closest non-NATO partners to have a discussion around issues like resilience, cyber, disinformation, technology and the like,” the official said in a virtual briefing.

He added, “This particular grouping of IP4 as we call them in NATO lingo — Australia, Japan, New Zealand and ROK … These are some of our closest partners that we work with in the region.” ROK stands for Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.

The NATO summit involving Indo-Pacific partners is set to take place on Thursday.

The official did not elaborate on the issue of resilience. In a NATO context, resilience refers to the capacity to prepare for, resist, respond to and quickly recover from shocks and disruptions across the full spectrum of threats, according to an article on NATO’s Allied Command Transformation website.

At the NATO gathering, there will be a “strong” demonstration of U.S. and allies’ support for Ukraine, the official said, highlighting Washington’s plan to announce new steps to strengthen Ukraine’s air defenses and military capabilities.

“Together, the Washington summit will send a strong signal to Putin that if he thinks he can outlast the coalition of countries supporting Ukraine, he’s dead wrong,” he said.

“We are also sending an important message to the rest of the world, including through our partnerships in the Indo-Pacific, as we stand together united and in support of democratic values,” he added.

The summit comes amid growing concerns about U.S. President Joe Biden’s mental health and physical fitness, which was called into question following a poor debate performance last week.

Observers said that President Biden is likely to capitalize on the summit to highlight that he is up for the job and capable of leading his nation for another four-year term.

“Foreign leaders have seen Joe Biden up close and personal for the last three years. They know who they are dealing with and they know how effective he’s been,” the official said.

“What the president has done over the last three years is to reinvigorate the NATO alliance, including expanding it, making it more capable. He has stood up to President Putin’s unprecedented aggression against Ukraine by mobilizing a coalition of a minimum of 50 allies and partners to provide capabilities to Ukraine.” (Yonhap)



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