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EU defence efforts musn't hurt transatlantic bond: NATO chief by Staff Writers Berlin (AFP) Nov 12, 2018 NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg warned Europe against undermining transatlantic ties, following a defence spat between US President Donald Trump and French leader Emmanuel Macron. Trump had tweeted on Friday that Macron's call for a "real European army" was "insulting". The US leader's criticism came after Macron spoke about the need for a European army and listed the US along with Russia and China as a threat to European security. Without referring specifically to Macron's call for a European army, Stoltenberg said he welcomed stronger EU efforts on defence that could strengthen NATO. But he warned European members against duplicating the alliance's work and jeopardising relations with the United States. "More European efforts on defence is great but it should never undermine the strength of the transatlantic bond," said Stoltenberg at a forum in Berlin. "This is partly about substance but also partly about perception because perception matters. "If we speak too much about a phrase like, for instance strategic autonomy... it sounds like you're going to do these big strategic things alone and I don't think that's wise. "Two World Wars and a Cold War taught us the importance of doing things together," he said. If they so wish, European allies can choose to carry out operations with or without the US within the framework of NATO, said Stoltenberg. But he would oppose the EU developing structures that duplicated the alliance's work. "The reality is that we need one strong and capable command structure, we can't divide those resources in two," said the NATO chief. Trump has repeatedly berated European NATO members like Germany for failing to meet spending targets set by the alliance. But in an interview aired on Sunday, Macron said Europe should not raise their defence budgets in order to purchase US-made weapons.
Dunford warns that Russia, China are near-peer military competition Washington (UPI) Nov 7, 2018 Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told an audience at Duke University that Russia and China are near-peer competitors that the U.S. needs to match, according to the Pentagon. In comments on Tuesday, Dunford said that China's rise and Russia's resurgent activities mark the return of great power military competition even as the U.S. continues to face concerns from Iran, North Korea and rogue militant groups and terrorism. The concern is real, as Secretary of Defen ... read more
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