Zelenskyy says Nato should let Ukraine join to ‘make all of us stronger’
ONP Summary
All 32 NATO member states are converging in Ankara on July 7-8 to announce tens of billions in defense contracts and increase spending commitments toward a 5% of GDP target by 2035. The summit occurs against concerns about depleted US weapons stockpiles from Ukraine and Iran conflicts, Turkey's detention of anti-NATO activists, and uncertainty about potential friction involving President Trump.
Progressive: NATO crisis and rights abuses — Progressive outlets warned that depleted US weapons stockpiles undermine NATO's capacity while Turkey's detention of activists violates basic freedoms.
Moderate: Defense plans amid detention scrutiny — Centrist outlets examined both the defense spending commitments and Turkey's detention of anti-NATO protesters as material concerns.
Conservative: Strengthened NATO defense posture — Conservative outlets highlighted defense contracts and spending increases as demonstrating NATO commitment, with Trump characterizing Erdoğan positively.
Ukraine’s president says defensive capabilities built up in war with Russia mean it would be wrong to exclude it
Europe live – latest updates
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has argued for Ukraine to be allowed to join Nato at its annual summit – saying it would be wrong to exclude a country that had built up strong defences in its long struggle against the Russian invasion.
The Ukrainian president said his country had developed almost all the weapons it needed, and now only required European help in developing an alternative to the US Patriots to protect against ballistic missile attack.
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