Obama and Cameron co-authored a powerful op-ed in The Times Of London.
They have called on NATO to reject “isolationist” impulses and
confront the rising terrorist threat posed by Sunni militants in the
Middle East, saying the United States and Britain “will not be cowed by
barbaric killers”, The Times informed.
“We
will not waver in our determination to confront” the militant group
known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, the two leaders
wrote in a joint opinion piece published in Thursday’s editions of The
Times of London. “If terrorists think we will weaken in the face of
their threats they could not be more wrong.”
Their pointed words
came as leaders gathered in Wales for a NATO summit meeting that was
originally intended to focus on responding to Russia’s escalating
military intervention in Ukraine, but the sidelines of the meeting will
be dominated by American and British efforts to assemble and lead an
international coalition against ISIS.
“The international community
as a whole has an obligation to stop the Islamic State from advancing
further,” Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the NATO secretary general, said at a
news conference on Thursday. But he noted that there had been no request
from Iraq for NATO assistance in confronting the group.
Mr. Obama
and the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Italy will meet with
President Petro O. Poroshenko of Ukraine to discuss the crisis in his
country, which will also be the topic of an afternoon meeting where
allies will consider sending additional assistance to Kiev.
Before
they met, Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, warned that
Ukraine’s efforts to form an alliance with NATO threatened to
short-circuit talks to end the fighting between pro-Russian separatists
and government forces in eastern Ukraine.
Mr. Lavrov, in televised
remarks in Moscow, said that discussions between top Ukrainian
officials and NATO leaders are “a blatant attempt to derail all the
efforts” to reach a negotiated settlement in Ukraine, the Associated
Press reported.
NATO leaders will also discuss winding down the
alliance’s combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of the year and
shifting it to a training and assistance mission, although details of
the transition cannot be finalized until Afghans resolve a disputed
presidential election.
In their joint editorial, Mr. Obama and Mr.
Cameron argued that ISIS is as immediate a threat to the security of
NATO members as is the behavior of Russia, which they wrote had “ripped
up the rule book” by annexing Crimea and sending its troops into
Ukraine. Russia has denied any military involvement in Ukraine.
“Whether
it is regional aggression going unchecked or the prospect that foreign
fighters could return from Iraq and Syria to pose a threat in our
countries, the problems we face today threaten the security of British
and American people, and the wider world,” they wrote.
Mr. Obama
and Mr. Cameron argued that NATO must transition to a “more effective
security network that fosters stability around the world,” urging member
nations to bolster military spending.
They also called for
keeping a “persistent” NATO defensive presence in Eastern Europe to make
clear to Russia that the alliance is serious about the defense of all
of its members, and expressed support for a rapid-response force —
expected to be endorsed by NATO allies this week — including land, air,
maritime and special forces “that could deploy anywhere in the world at
very short notice.”
Kilde: http://charter97.org/en/news/2014/9/4/114179/
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