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NATO fears Russian chemical attack in Ukraine by AFP Staff Writers Brussels (AFP) March 15, 2022 NATO is worried Russia is gearing up to carry out a chemical attack in Ukraine, secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said Tuesday, ahead of a meeting of the alliance's defence ministers. "We are concerned that Moscow could stage a false flag operation possibly including chemical weapons," the NATO chief told reporters, citing "absurd claims" from Russia that Ukraine possesses biological weapons labs. NATO, he said, remains "very vigilant" on that risk and stressed that Russia would have "a high price to pay" if it carried out such a "violation of international law". He refused to "speculate about any any military response from the NATO side" if such a chemical attack happened. Wednesday's meeting, Stoltenberg said, would cover "concrete measures to reinforce our security for the longer term in all domains" to adapt to the changed threat environment arising from Russia's "senseless war". "This could include substantially more forces in the eastern part of the alliance at higher readiness and with more pre-positioned equipments," on top of the bolstered NATO forces already sent to NATO countries bordering Ukraine, he said. A long-scheduled NATO summit in Madrid in June would look at longer-term changes for the alliance. "It's important to distinguish greatly about the immediate response -- all the tens of thousands more troops, air power and naval power -- and then the more long-term adjustment or posture," to be discussed in June, he said. Asked about rumours of a possible NATO summit in Brussels next week with leaders including US President Joe Biden, Stoltenberg demurred. "We are able to convene a NATO summit with NATO leaders on short notice but I cannot go into more details about that now," he said. Presidents and prime ministers of the European Union -- which accounts for most NATO members -- are already to gather in Brussels next Thursday and Friday for a summit focused on Russia's war in Ukraine.
Islamic State group new chief's priority? 'Staying alive' Paris (AFP) March 11, 2022 The Islamic State group's new leader will have two key priorities, expert Hans-Jakob Schindler told AFP, to keep ties between its multiple subsidiaries - and simply to stay alive. The jihadist group revealed the identity of its third chief since its inception on Thursday, confirming the death of its leader Abu Ibrahim al-Qurashi, more than a month after his demise, and naming Abu Hasan al-Hashemi al-Qurashi as his successor. According to the White House and US defence officials, Abu Ibrahim al- ... read more
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