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tv   NATO  Deutsche Welle  August 21, 2024 11:15pm-12:01am CEST

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on the other hand, you're not spending that money back on you, but in terms of education, in terms of health services or solutions, if you're spending all of that money for us to keep the sector, i'm for the on them steps. then that's one of the see big changes in the sun. and then on top of that you have that reduction in unity in suspense. what actually on what, how do we have the same prices inside of us on? so it is a money going inside of house, i mean, focusing on the humanitarian assistance to the point of sparks. but of course, the age that was being for development of the company that was creating jobs, employment, and was also boosting the domestic economy of upon and stuck on the private sector as loved it. and what? because for back to be to the ag to happen, we have to have under just to make government, we have to have it done. one debt, as a sponsor was an account that was due to see, but that's engaging and working with the people. so the, that the governments and had the private sector, the medium sector, i'm going to get that all these set just kind of together to recover the front of
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me of the country. and now i guess thank you for talking to us. the nato, the north atlantic treaty organization was formed to 75 years ago. it's aimed to prevent war between solver and countries, the 75 years of europe and history without a war. that's the ultimate expression of a successful alliance. then on february 24th 2022, russia launched
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a full scale invasion of ukraine. war had returned to europe. ukraine itself is not a needle member, but russia's actions have prompted the question. is the western military alliance capable of defending itself? how strong is nato among european members? especially, there are some glaring weaknesses. p here again, security is basically 90 percent dependent on the us. and this isn't themes from that's 27, is that count handled medium sized missions on their own. and this documentary we'll hear from people who know nato, from the inside the we cannot guarantee that we could protect munich frankfurt. berlin can do it, found that in the aftermath of the 2nd world war, nato achieve the unimaginable over time. former enemies became partners. i
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think this is fascinating. there were also german officers who are part of nato's command structure, who had been fighting against the americans and the british in the 2nd world war. 75 years after its founding nato's importance is now greater than it has been since the cold war. around the world, there was an increasing focus on military mike, the me, it's not just pressure, but also china. and then at least i think saudi arabia has tripled its ground for existence. 2010. so put the iphone and what about nato? we took a holiday from reality and now we're dealing with the consequences of the the
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this is moans in belgium. it's a city of about 100000 residents, 70 kilometers from the capital brussels. the it's home to one of the most well protected buildings in the world. nato's military headquarters, the supreme headquarters allied powers, europe for shape, for short. it's a central hub for vital security information around the clock. everything from movements and the, or the defense alliance as borders to suspicious activity worldwide. the absolutely rob bower chairs, the nato military committee. he acts as a link between the political world and the military. the lions is there enough for
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75 years and we went from 12 to not almost 32 members. so that in itself, i would say is the proof that this alliance adds value otherwise. so many nations would not have joined when it was founded after world war 2, nato consisted of 12 countries. its goal during the cold war was to contain communism and prevent the soviet union and the eastern block from expanding their influence. overtime, 20 more countries have joints, nato, including former eastern bloc states. today, the alliance stretches from the arctic ocean in the north, to turkeys border with syria in the southeast, and from the baltic states on russia's border across the atlantic to the us and to canada. it is the world's largest defense
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alliance, providing security for 1000000000 people. and yet nato itself has no troops of its own. the way it is constructed is that the nato is basically 3 things. it is command and control. it is standardized ation. the end of this exercises and the troops come from the nations, the southern states, all $31.00 seem to be $32.00. and so once nations give for their troops to nato, for an exercise, for an operation, or for collective defense. once that has been done, then the supreme allied commander, your general corvalle, is in command of those forces and he can use them within the mission that he's been given. the traumatic effect of military
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conflict, where a key factor in establishing nato, the i think that it's essential to recognize that nato is created and founded in the aftermath of the 2nd world war. and so the war and its destruction loom over all of the people involved in these. ready decisions, so many of these men, and they're almost all men in this story, early in nato's history, had fought in either the 1st or 2nd world war or played a role. and so part of nato's founding is about making sure that war doesn't happen again. so many of the people believe that what they're doing in creating nato is presenting a return to war in europe. when the alliance was found,
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it had no military structure, no command center. first and foremost, nato was a promise. the, i think it's important recognize that when the treaty was signed and 1949, it was a symbolic treaty. it was a political symbol that these 12 states were going to protect each other and work side by side. on april, 4th, 1949 heads of government, foreign ministers, and senior diplomats from 12 countries gathered to sign the north atlantic treaty in washington, dc. the agreement had just 14 articles, but if there is anything starting today, if there is anything in the future, it is the will of the people of the world of freedom and far p
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just a few months later in august 1949, the soviet union designated its 1st atomic bomb with that the us no longer had a monopoly on nuclear weapons. and the arms race gathered speed. the soviet union became the west number one enemy. with nuclear weapons in use, any provocation could have meant the end of the world as we knew it the . and yet at the time, the greatest fear of nato's founders wasn't the direct attack by the soviet union. it was one canadian historian timothy andrews, sail called the weakness of democracy. the particular worry in the late 19
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forties see was that the experience of the 2nd world war had been so devastating and so traumatic for the people of europe that they would not be willing to fight for their state or for their national interests in the future. the worry was that if the soviet union were to mobilize its forces or stage exercises or somehow flax its military muscle, then perhaps citizens in european countries would ask their leaders to give in to whatever the soviet demands or the millions of deaths during the 2nd world war were front of mind. and according to the historians, theory democracies leave themselves open to blackmail because they trying to keep the peace at all costs. they tend to offer compromises and give in to pressure by being a part of nato. and by being a part of the alliance,
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the leaders felt that they could go to their people and say we're part of something bigger. and in the aftermath of the war, when leaders did not think that their people would ever be willing to fight again, it was very important to show this group strength today, 75 years after nato was founded. for is once again being found in europe. the world's biggest military alliance has had to ask itself if worse came to worst, how well would it be able to defend itself? the whole nation is have to make sure they can defend themselves. that's article 3. and we have basically neglected that for many years since somebody's, for example, prison has greatly reduced its land forces. germany does have land forces, but them not necessarily compatible with other armed forces. funds has nuclear
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weapons, but far too few of them compared to russia is new to us, no sense vocab. after the cold war, the emphasis on collective defense faded more and more needles focus, shifted to operations in afghanistan and libya, and the so called war on terror. the i'm, i'm, is that's also and so we had overseas missions that required small and mobile units of armed forces, klein will be in the center broad for very, very specific tasks that brought the shape for in the crisis response operations. time is on our side. we decide are we going to have got to stop and when and with how many forces and for how long. but in collect a defense, an x for very might take you and then you are ready for your not the alliances weaknesses are now becoming a parent. nato has grown to include the $32.00 countries. that's $32.00 sovereign
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states, which means a whole lot of bureaucracy. the being able to deploy troops quickly can be decisive in more modern europe. that's a big job. despite the you and the shing, and free movements, only from 2014 to 2017 lieutenant general. ben hodges was the commanding general of us troops in europe. the so you know, you to take a truck, load of apples from poland to portugal, never be stopped. he could drive all the way through. i can't do that with military . and i had troops that were up in the baltic countries in poland, small numbers. and um, and i noticed that my ab ation, that helicopter unit was their maintenance readiness level was going down. and i asked my commitment, aviation brigade commander from onbox said,
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why are they not repaired, what's taking so long? and you said so we, we cannot get the maintenance parts from onbox. the little bar to it takes weeks. i said what? i was not heave i just assumed driving from onbox to lou verda that would be like um, being on the interstate $95.00 in the us from florida to virginia. you mean your it's all nato countries, all e u countries. what's the problem? and that's when we realized that there was a problem moving military equipment across borders through the different nations you had to have permission. nato is aware of the problem. since 2021, it's been operating what it calls joint support and enabling demand for jason, based in the southern german city of the j 6 main role is to cut through the bureaucratic red tape when it comes to troop deployment. its commander is lieutenant general alexander's all the funk
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the i'm the food, the district to we have a federal structure and was hoping to split into that means you have to get states with different governments working together. as enough. i'm with audit. there are forms that need filling out which are very thorough and still very from nation to nation tool. so that's something we're working on. see if they've done listen, see, then you have to consider things like customs regulations. for example, for animal disease prevention is to use or appropriate box it, but to move tanks across germany, you have to put them on a train quickly or put them on the back of a one of these large trucks. we don't have enough of these trucks to carry tanks so you need to what you bought. but in peace time, don't you mind is not just calling us that they shouldn't just stop doing an intake
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tank. so having to work through these process, this is very tedious. it's not sexy me. this is the old of thoughts barracks and bavaria, southeastern germany. tomorrow the soldiers are traveling to lithuania and on behalf of nato, the the tanks will be transported to lithuania by train. even the trip to the railway station requires meticulous coordination. the, the route is along the highway. they have a precise window to make the journey from the barracks to the train station. everything must happen before rush hour. across europe, there are bridges that were built in the recent decades of peace time. so little
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thought was given to whether they could bear the weight of heavy military equipment . the tanks must cross these bridge one at a time. every german rage remembers inc. still see in western germany, the yellow assigned that has the weights. this bridge will hold, and i mean, everywhere in west germany, you have the sun. you don't have that as you go further to the east, the each unit being sent to nato's eastern flank and lithuania takes its own equipment, the that way. procedures and movements can be practiced and internalized the just kind of mind thoughts like i know my vehicle has what i mean. i know what fault has or does it have you here this to and our maintenance partner hill. we can do things like
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send a spear part 2nd way that's tight enough to send it to the when the tanks from the previous receipts and we're going to other conversations, right? yeah, it's like having a car. so if you drag your root and you don't just swap it, but someone else's is your ultimate on top of any of those. the aim of j sac is to create a kind of common military zone, akin to europe's border free shang, in the area. in the future, nato wants to be able to deploy 100000 soldiers in 10 days. right now it takes 15 days to deploy less than half that number. and it's not just about the soldiers themselves to be i'm, i don't know. we've just seen this with the war and you crane alonzo eats up incredible amounts of resources. ukraine supposes are really struggling just to produce enough ammunition. they've scoured all the existing stock calls and used to every single time. i go to poll defrosted for it and send script finished when,
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according to calculations, an average of $50000.00 artillery rounds are currently being fired per day in the rest of the ukraine war with us, most of those munitions have to be produced as well. so you mostly have to be on hand, a, go to morning seal, so german ammunition needs to also fit in dutch barrels. and with some of them it has to be distributed to depos somewhere in europe, in a logical way flowing, optimize. it hopefully will never needed the sea, but it's part of having credible deterrence. alberto says he got tired of the clock, but he's not sure who jason is also responsible for ensuring sufficient ammunition supplies in case of a direct attack. lieutenant general, adult funk and his international team use simulations to practice for that. eventually, how much equipment is available to troops and of given place? where are their shortfalls? how much fuel is needed?
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which roads and bridges can they use? and where might the team have to improvise? where are the most strategic locations for weapons depos? here at j sec headquarters, every conceivable conflict scenario is played out. most importantly, everything that's planned here has to be achievable at any time. up should i call them books and what that will deterrence only works if our plans and preparations are credible to size. so in other words, a fleet has to work in the event that we have to defend ourselves. we're done kind of stuff in order to do what we all want to do, namely prevent war. and i have to, for example, be able to manage this re deployment of large bodies of troops and piece time of course. and so before the 1st shot is ever fired, i can make it clear to the opponents that they are going to fail. okay. awesome. just so i think at 1st everything goes to plan for the soldiers from bavaria on
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their way to let the when you the loading process is completed. but then there's an unexpected the leg due to a rail strike. the train is only able to travel a few kilometers 3 days later, it's still in bavaria. nato headquarters in brussels, where crucial political decisions are made. in the event of an attack on a needle member states, this is where leaders would decide whether to invoke article 5 in the nato process. article 5, of course, is the article in the washington treaty that is most well known armed attack them on she'll be considered an armed attack on now everybody knows about article 5, but that's not a, a laser beam. like if you go to the store in,
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in the door automatically opens up. there is no automatic trigger for article 5 is that comes with that being consultation in which all nature members states would have to agree to officially consider article 5 acceptance and put it into effect to a v, a to point and cost it's such decisions must be made unanimously by all members and countries such as germany and the united states military operations also have to be approved by parliament or congress. you remember last year there was a missile that landed inside poland and killed 2 poems. and if this was an automatic thing that you, somebody could've said missile headspace, russian missile heads inside poland. article 5. of course, the, the, the people involved in the process involved are mature enough to say, wait a minute, we need let's, let's check and see what happens in the beginning. that idea that article 5 would
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compels other allies to fight to defend one ally was the hope of the british and the french and the canadians. that the, that's what they wanted article 5 to say. but the united states would not have that because it took way the power of congress to declare war. the problem is that the more countries there are, the more individual interests come into play. if just one member state refuses to consent, article 5 folders. we have 3200000 soldiers that need to know what to do. so it's not enough to say no and need a war in a crisis. if you're a tech, you can say no, but we're still a tech. so we need a solution. so as somebody says, no, then we expect from bets, nation that says no point during that if yes, the nato allows for what's called constructive abstention. this means that the alliance can be invoked even if not, everyone agrees. but a no vote would be
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a problem. in the case of an attack, if we have one nation, says this is we do not support. this is article 5. then the other nations can still act in a multilateral way, but it won't be under a nato construct. so this will be a problem. and yet the foundational ideas behind nato, our community and solidarity. the in the 19 fifties and into the sixty's. there was a real effort to try and connect the people of the nato countries with each other. and so things like educational exchanges and study tours and professional associations were considered to be very important and building up that solidarity within the alliance. and so a lot of american officials spend a lot of time thinking about how to build those relationships,
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not just between the leaders, but between people in that era. such exchanges often began with presenting the typical customs of a given country. the milk buffer aches and cheese cheese made by special formulas and spills passed down from generations of peasant cheese make producing delicacies, light on the back, come them their payments to up the work, the archive of material legs. it shows nato's early years, educational films, from a pre globalized era made by the organizations own press office. the focus wasn't on weapons or military maneuvers. instead, individual member states were introduced through their traditions and culture. these films weren't intended for the public. they were shown to soldiers before
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they were stationed in a different country, part of pre deployment training to help answer questions like, what are they like over there? what can we expect the and i think this is fascinating. there are also german officers who are part of nato's command structure, who had been fighting against the americans and the british and the 2nd world war. so these men, ad 5 beside each other in some cases, had fought against each other and then worked to build this alliance together. during the cold war, the nato base is already existed in federal germany. and that's one of them. and international jet pilot school men from the united kingdom, from western germany, and the united states, and the arm of france and those eventually, we're going to train together in 1955,
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just 10 years after the end of the 2nd world war west germany was admitted to nato, but despite the emphasis on community, the fear of being abandoned by one's own allies is as old as nato itself. the. this idea that, or maybe some of the allies would just sit back in a war was constantly on the mind of leaders throughout the cold war. would the united states really defend western europe. if in response to the soviet union would fire nuclear missiles at the united states. and so it's from the late 19 fifties on that. this balancing act becomes extremely difficult. the very same year that the federal republic of germany joined nato. vin chancellor corner hot. uh no, i asked experts for a legal opinion. he wanted to know how binding article 5 really was. in other words,
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what was washington's obligation if germany were to be attacked? the lawyers assessment both the question of whether an attack has occurred and the question of the nature and the extent of the assistance to be provided or at the discretion of the united states. which suggests that any country is free to decide whether or not to stand by an allied remedy. i take the 1st cons, article 5 makes you think. oh, and i say if i attack of nato member states, then all the other 31 are going to come and smack me down. i'm of the month. but if i really read it in detail, what it says is each member promises to see an attack on another. and they don't remember states as an attack on themselves. on the same events, sometimes some were playing. so they might just say, yes, i see it as an attack on me, but i still won't do anything. honors then chancellor kind of out of nowhere did not want to rely on article 5. he opted for a different kind of guarantee the stationing of us soldiers on west german soil for
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i'm not what they were the real safe guard. one of the reasons it was so important to have american, british and canadian forces in europe was that they served as something of a trip wire for article 5 or 4 the other allies to come to the aid of europeans or germany. especially if it were. if the federal republic was attacked is a very important political signal, because no american political leader is going to allow some american troops to get caught up in a war or a small conflict without util, talary of us power coming to join that fight. this is woke law and lithuanian soldiers from several nations have been stationed here since 2017. they're a part of nato's multinational battle groups after russia annex
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crimea, from ukraine in 2014. these small mobile units were set up under permanent nato command. their station to long nato's eastern border and estonia, latvia, lithuania and to poland. the strength of each battle group is $1000.00 to 2000 soldiers and further battle groups have been added since russia's full scale invasion of ukraine in 20. 22. in slovakia. hungry, romania and bull guerria. germany is responsible for a battle group in lithuania, near the swell key gap, a 100 kilometers stretch of the lithuanian polish border between bella, bruce and the russian. escalade of kalynne and grad nato believes it's where a russian attack would be. most likely. colonel klaus paid back a, as in command of the german contingent station here in lithuania,
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protested objectively speaking full size from russia and better, ruth. all no longer present in the kind of strength we saw before, the wall in ukraine. the customary forces have been withdrawn and they pointed in ukraine are coming up at sea. so objectively, we can say that when not currently under any acute trent mod done these splinters, the german soldiers from the barracks in bavaria have now arrived by plane. but their tanks are still in transit and the evening there's a flag ceremony symbolizing the change over the troops. while some are heading home after 6 months, the others are left with an important task, demonstrating loud and clear that nato won't abandon lithuania in the event of armed conflict.
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so it's lisa wayne. yeah, as a tech, it's not only so this way here, but it is our soldiers that are working there. and therefore, it is maybe not seen by people as dutch soil and dutch or germans foil. but it is our soldiers that work there and are going to be attacked. it's the same principle that called nevada on an hour relied on security isn't guaranteed by the famous article 5, but by the international make up of a military presence. using these types of the german armed forces here all ready for action. and so it's by the same time that showing that lets you ain't in people look and say we're here standing alongside you shoulder to shoulder for dogs. because we can't forget that it wasn't totally the americans who guaranteed on security during the cold war. and it was several allied countries you could say, when now repaying the favor, we're helping to pass on luckily experienced in the past in terms of security and
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protection for its full value to make sure that our comm rates here in lithuania and in the other baltic states also voted in protecting nato's eastern flag of bible schwartz and another struggle disco to develop. the nato's defense policy is seldom popular before russia's war in ukraine approval of nato. and the united kingdom was 59 percent in germany. it was 54 percent and in france just the 39 percent. even more dramatic were pulling results regarding article 5 and the obligation to defend allies prior to the war and ukraine, only 32 percent of french respondents were in favor of providing military support to nato member romania if it were to be attacked by russia. and just 14 percent of
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german said they would want to stand by nato member turkey in the event of a sion attack. but the truth is support for nato has always fluctuated even during the cold war, the in west germany. for example, the 1980 saw a big piece movement that lead other nato countries to wonder. just how reliable the germans were as allies, the leaders who built nato. and then the leaders who maintain nato are frequently talking behind closed doors about germany and their worries about what germany will do in the world. and this takes one of to pass. so one argument earlier in the cold war is this fear that germany is going to try and establish itself as an independent, strong power in europe. and that this will be
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a return to the 1st half of the 20th century. and that motivates a lot of years in the 19 fifties and 19 sixties. and then there's a switch from the 19 sixty's on. there is a fear and a worry that perhaps the germans no longer wish to be powerful at all. this is a period when there are major demonstrations in germany against nuclear weapons, against nato, against the united states forces in germany. and that sentiment still persists in parts of the population. today the, it is slow, but this as easy as i think a whole lot of people in germany have very happily being in an intellectual, political, and economic comfort zone. the motto has been what's have a rush year is doing in syria or georgia or ukraine isn't nice, but it has nothing to do with us over this happened. it was me support a lack of
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solidarity and no common vision. in 2019 the year of the alliance is 70 of the anniversary french president. and by the way, my call went so far as to say, nato was experiencing brain deaf products by brands is a problem with nato has always been that they want more from it. not less, that's how my cause comment must be understood. perhaps has consistently been one of the allies saying, we almost do more than what we're doing here to my home criticized what he saw as a complete lack of common strategy within nato. it's been doris. thank god for a long time, jeremy had a kind of fine current attitude towards anything involving conflict. i think that's why max on gave a wake up call. it's not just about money or soldiers. it's about asking, can you even imagine the worst case scenario? because if not, you'll be truly helpless as it happened, its maximum subsequent. 2 days later than planned,
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the tanks arrive in lithuania. but before they finally reached the barracks, there's one more hurdle to clear. a few kilometers shy of their destination, the tanks have to be re loaded onto another train. the tracks and some eastern european countries have different gauges and aren't compatible with those in western europe. and our defense situation, the trains would have been here on time straight wouldn't have happened and the german real operator would have gotten them here on the schedule. it's not until the next morning that the tanks finally had to where they will be station for the next 6 months. they drive the last few kilometers along country roads. soon there will be german
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kindergartens schools and supermarkets built in the region. that's because a new german brigade will be permanently stationed in lithuania, operational by 2027, about 5000 soldiers and their families will live here. the move as part of nato's defense strategy to prevent russia from attacking other former soviet countries after ukraine. that's especially a concern in the baltic states, unlike and ukraine. here, it would constitute a direct attack on nato territory. the me, there are also conflicts between russia and nato on the cyber level. and investigation published in 2023 revealed the vulcan files leak, and the existence of hacking centers working for the russian government. the
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revelation showed how moscow was trying to destabilize the west via the internet. nato's response to this new threat can be found in the estonian capital talent close to the russian border. this is the cooperative cyber defense center of excellence. so nato in general, has acknowledged a significant incentive board in tulsa cyber cyber attacks and declared in 2021 that in certain cases so well that the effects of cyber cyber effect the cyber attacks against the nato nations can trick are natal article fives, that means collect the defense and response might not be lead me despised cyberspace. only the alliance is top cyber professionals meet to your regularly to practice for emergency situations. the annual lock shield
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simulation involves defending a fictitious country from a cyber attack. so it can be called like say, with championship or lympics or 5 or defenders every year. and the purpose of it these to east do have the smoke, the national environment where to most complex and then on the simulated the environment, the ac used. like in real case, when a nation is under a cyber dec, another annual simulation crossed swords took place in december 2023. it involved responding to a threat to with a counter attack. those taking part had to disable a power plant tech surveillance cameras and obstruct a rail network. the points were awarded for each hack server and
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a winner was determined at the end. ukrainian experts also took part in the simulation. meanwhile, just over a 1000 kilometers to the south, russian hackers actually shut down ukraine's biggest telecoms operator for several days. after the soviet union dissolved and eastern european countries left the eastern bloc and gradually joined nato. in 1999 poland the check republic and hungary became members. 5 years later, estonia, latvia, lithuania, bulgaria, romania, slovakia, and slovenia followed. albania and croatia joined in 292017 k montenegro, and in 2020 north macedonia, became the last country to join nato before the war. and ukraine. why is it that so many nations at work that are former soviet republics, such as estonia, that being left? when you are former members of the worst,
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i'll pack like poland. why did they seek to join nato as soon as they possibly could? why does ukraine want to do it now? just because they know what it's like to be under russian control. some people say that by expanding nato toward russia, that we were committing a form of aggression that we were threatening russia. i can tell you because i was there in the george h. w bush administration. when the warsaw pact collapsed and then when the soviet union union disintegrated, central and eastern european countries were pounding on nato's door, asking admission. they had been dominated by the soviet union since the end of world war 2. they wanted to be free, and they wanted to be with what they saw as like minded countries in the west. we didn't do any recruiting to add to nato membership. all of the countries that joined opened the process themselves.
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the gym and research team wants to save lives worldwide. by making m r i technology
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more flexible. up to now the equipment has been too heavy and expensive. more than half of the world's population had no access to it. now, 3 researches have developed a new system, an opportunity for millions of people made in germany. in 1st few minutes, on the w. time of a sudden i fly up with pleasure. without alcohol, the spanish mediterranean island of my york has issued at them. alcohol is no longer allowed image notorious parties, power towards reacting and the local focus on a 90 minute d w. there's a note just to have
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a site to make the right decision to dw news. i'm interested in, you know, follow the dw news, and these are our top stories. former us president brock obama has led the crowd at the democratic national convention in vocal support of cumberland harris sought to energize the delegates in the arena and the undecided voters outside saying america is ready for a president. come over here's. here's, we'll give her main address of the convention later this week. funeral services have been held for tv is really hostages, whose bodies were recovered from gaza, is really troops recovered the bodies of 6 hostages during the night time rate and the city of fun, eunice. 6 men were all kidnapped from communities near israel's border.

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