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Wartime NATO summits have focused on Ukraine. With Trump, this one will be different

(L-R) U.S. President Donald Trump, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen depart following a group photo in front of the Canadian Rockies at the Kananaskis Country Golf Course during the G7 Leaders' Summit on June 16, 2025 in Kananaskis, Alberta. (AFP)
(L-R) U.S. President Donald Trump, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen depart following a group photo in front of the Canadian Rockies at the Kananaskis Country Golf Course during the G7 Leaders' Summit on June 16, 2025 in Kananaskis, Alberta. (AFP)
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Updated 23 June 2025

Wartime NATO summits have focused on Ukraine. With Trump, this one will be different

Wartime NATO summits have focused on Ukraine. With Trump, this one will be different
  • Then at the Group of Seven summit in Canada, Trump called for Russia to be allowed back into the group; a move that would rehabilitate Putin on the global stage
  • Zelensky had traveled to Canada to meet with him. No meeting happened, and no statement on Russia or the war was agreed

BRUSSELS: At its first summits after Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, NATO gave President Volodymyr Zelensky pride of place at its table. It won’t be the same this time.
Europe’s biggest land conflict since World War II is now in its fourth year and still poses an existential threat to the continent. Ukraine continues to fight a war so that Europeans don’t have to. Just last week, Russia launched one of the biggest drone attacks of the invasion on Kyiv.
But things have changed. The Trump administration insists that it must preserve maneuvering space to entice Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table, so Ukraine must not be allowed steal the limelight.
In Washington last year, the military alliance’s weighty summit communique included a vow to supply long-term security assistance to Ukraine, and a commitment to back the country “on its irreversible path” to NATO membership. The year before, a statement more than twice as long was published in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius. A new NATO-Ukraine Council was set up, and Kyiv’s membership path fast-tracked. Zelensky received a hero’s welcome at a concert downtown.
It will be very different at a two-day summit in the Netherlands that starts Tuesday. NATO’s most powerful member, the United States, is vetoing Ukraine’s membership. It’s unclear how long for.
Zelensky is invited again, but will not be seated at NATO’s table. The summit statement is likely to run to around five paragraphs, on a single page, NATO diplomats and experts say. Ukraine will only get a passing mention.
If the G7 summit is anything to go by ...
Recent developments do not augur well for Ukraine.
Earlier this month, frustrated by the lack of a ceasefire agreement, US President Donald Trump said it might be best to let Ukraine and Russia “fight for a while” before pulling them apart and pursuing peace.
Last weekend, he and Putin spoke by phone, mostly about Israel and Iran, but a little about Ukraine, too, Trump said. America has warned its allies that it has other security priorities, including in the Indo-Pacific and on its own borders.
Then at the Group of Seven summit in Canada, Trump called for Russia to be allowed back into the group; a move that would rehabilitate Putin on the global stage.
The next day, Russia launched its mass drone attack on Kyiv. Putin “is doing this simply because he can afford to continue the war. He wants the war to go on. It is troubling when the powerful of this world turn a blind eye to it,” Zelensky said.
Trump left the G7 gathering early to focus on the conflict between Israel and Iran. Zelensky had traveled to Canada to meet with him. No meeting happened, and no statement on Russia or the war was agreed.
Lacking unanimity, other leaders met with Zelensky to reassure him of their support.
Questions about US support for Ukraine
Trump wants to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. He said he could do it within 100 days, but that target has come and gone. Things are not going well, as a very public bust up with Zelensky at the White House demonstrated.
Trump froze military aid and intelligence sharing with Ukraine’s armed forces for a week. The US has stepped back from the Ukraine Defense Contact Group that was set up under the Biden administration and helped to drum up weapons and ammunition.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth skipped its last meeting; the first time a Pentagon chief has been absent since Russian forces invaded in February 2022.
Addressing Congress on June 10, Hegseth also acknowledged that funding for Ukraine military assistance, which has been robust for the past two years, will be reduced in the upcoming defense budget.
It means Kyiv will receive fewer of the weapons systems that have been key to countering Russia’s attack. Indeed, no new aid packages have been approved for Ukraine since Trump took office again in January.
“The message from the administration is clear: Far from guaranteed, future US support for Ukraine may be in jeopardy,” said Riley McCabe, Associate Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a US-based policy research organization.
Cutting aid, McCabe warned, could make the Kremlin believe “that US resolve is fleeting, and that time is on Russia’s side.”
“Putin has less incentive to negotiate if he believes that US disengagement is inevitable and that Russia will soon gain an advantage on the battlefield,” he said.
What the summit might mean for Kyiv
Trump wants the summit to focus on defense spending. The 32 allies are expected to agree on an investment pledge that should meet his demands.
Still, the Europeans and Canada are determined to keep a spotlight on the war, wary that Russia could set its sights on one of them next. They back Trump’s ceasefire efforts with Putin but also worry that the two men are cozying up.
Also, some governments may struggle to convince their citizens of the need to boost defense spending at the expense of other budget demands without a strong show of support for Ukraine — and acknowledgement that Russia remains NATO’s biggest security threat.
The summit is highly symbolic for Ukraine in other ways. Zelensky wants to prevent his country from being sidelined from international diplomacy, but both he and his allies rely on Trump for US military backup against Russia.
Concretely, Trump and his counterparts will dine with the Dutch King on Tuesday evening. Zelensky could take part. Elsewhere, foreign ministers will hold a NATO-Ukraine Council, the forum where Kyiv sits among the 32 allies as an equal to discuss its security concerns and needs.
What is clear is that the summit will be short. One working session on Wednesday. It was set up that way to prevent the meeting from derailing. If the G7 is anything to go by, Trump’s focus on his new security priorities — right now, the conflict between Israel and Iran — might make it even shorter.


‘Gaza’s biggest chance for peace lies in cross-regional cooperation,’ UNGA President Annalena Baerbock tells Arab News

‘Gaza’s biggest chance for peace lies in cross-regional cooperation,’ UNGA President Annalena Baerbock tells Arab News
Updated 14 sec ago

‘Gaza’s biggest chance for peace lies in cross-regional cooperation,’ UNGA President Annalena Baerbock tells Arab News

‘Gaza’s biggest chance for peace lies in cross-regional cooperation,’ UNGA President Annalena Baerbock tells Arab News
  • Marking second anniversary of Oct. 7 attack, Baerbock backs Trump’s Gaza peace plan, praises Saudi-French efforts to achieve the two-state solution
  • Former German foreign minister urges reform to keep UN “relevant and effective” amid growing crises, from Gaza and Sudan to AI and climate change

NEW YORK CITY: In an era defined by compounding crises — from devastating wars in Gaza and Sudan to global demands for UN reform — few leaders embody the intersection of national commitment and international responsibility as Annalena Baerbock.

Since transitioning from German foreign minister to president of the UN General Assembly in June, Baerbock’s journey has placed her at the epicenter of world diplomacy at a time when the very structure of global cooperation is being questioned.

Speaking to Arab News shortly after the intensive High-Level Week of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, Baerbock reflected on her firsthand encounters with human tragedy, the urgent necessity of compromise and the obstacles facing the UN as it navigates perhaps its most turbulent chapter since its founding.

Indeed, as Baerbock put it, “there was hardly any topic over this High-Level Week where all the 193 member states agreed.”

This week marks the second anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel, which killed about 1,200 people and saw 250 taken hostage. Israel’s military retaliation in Gaza has since killed 67,000 Palestinians, according to Palestinian health officials, although the true figure is likely far higher.

Baerbock, who was serving as Germany’s foreign minister at the time of the Hamas attack, recalled visiting the affected areas. She described a heart-wrenching meeting with a father whose daughters had been kidnapped.

“I was thinking the whole time, ‘if these were my girls’,” Baerbock told Arab News, recalling the father’s anguish as he watched video footage of his daughters being loaded into trucks by militants headed for Gaza.

“All these horrors, realizing what humans can do to other humans, was an incredible, traumatic watershed moment.”

She added: “The same counts today for seeing innocent Palestinian children walking through the rubble of what was their home, without their parents, left searching for food, drinking rainwater — because they have nothing left.”

Quoting an Israeli mother, she said: “‘It doesn’t bring back my child if a Palestinian mother loses hers in Israeli airstrikes.’ This war must end.”

Marking the solemn anniversary, Baerbock called for immediate peace. “This decades-long conflict between Palestinians and Israelis can never be overcome by endless war — neither by terrorism, nor by permanent occupation,” she said.

“Israeli people can only live in lasting peace if Palestinians can live in dignity in their own state. And Palestinians can only live in their own state in dignity if Israelis’ right of existence is guaranteed in the region.”

The second anniversary of the attack comes as indirect talks continue in Sharm El-Sheikh, where Egyptian and Qatari officials are shuttling between delegations from Israel and Hamas. The goal is to reach a final agreement on a US-backed plan to end the Gaza war.

US President Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan proposes an immediate end to fighting and the release of 48 hostages — of whom only 20 are thought to be alive — in exchange for hundreds of detained Palestinians.

It stipulates that once both sides agree, “full aid will be immediately sent into the Gaza Strip.” The plan also states that Hamas would have no role in governing Gaza and leaves open the prospect of an eventual Palestinian state.

Baerbock called it “a sign of hope” that, after more than 700 days of suffering, the world’s major powers are signaling that the war must end.

She said Trump’s plan builds on momentum created by the New York Declaration and the two-state summit co-chaired by ֱ and France during High-Level Week. “This initiative unites Arab countries, Europe, and the US in calling for hostages’ release, humanitarian access and a ceasefire,” she said.

Highlighting ֱ’s role, Baerbock described the “cross-regional cooperation” between key Arab and Western states as essential for reviving peace efforts. Drawing on her diplomatic experience, she noted how preparatory meetings in Riyadh and Munich laid essential groundwork.

“Nowadays, the biggest chance for peace lies in cross-regional cooperation — making it clear that it’s in everyone’s interest to bring conflicts to an end. This cooperation between ֱ and France, in the name of many other countries, was, in my view, a crucial step.

“But it didn’t come out of the blue. In my previous role, I remember all the night meetings I had with key Arab countries and a few European foreign ministers. We met in Riyadh, we met in Munich, in closed rooms, to prepare for these peace plan steps.”

The plan and the New York Declaration exceed calls for a ceasefire. They demand Hamas disarm, an Israeli military withdrawal from Gaza, the creation of a civilian Palestinian administration devoid of Hamas and security guarantees — including a possible stabilization force to prevent future violence, a force Baerbock herself proposed as foreign minister.

Baerbock stepped into her new role at a time when the UN faces an existential crisis. Geopolitical tensions have paralyzed the Security Council, budget cuts have triggered a financial crisis and global threats — from climate change and artificial intelligence to multiple wars — challenge the UN’s viability in upholding peace and security.

Reflecting on the 80th General Assembly session, Baerbock described the UN as “at a crossroads.

“The UN is more relevant than ever, but it must reform to stay effective,” she said.

Almost 190 member states and more than 120 heads of state took part in High-Level Week, reinforcing the UN’s continued centrality in addressing global crises.

“Together with the secretary-general, we very openly told world leaders: This is their UN. This is our UN. You cannot blame the UN for failing and then not contribute to peacekeeping missions. You cannot blame the UN for failing and then violate the UN Charter.”

Despite initial skepticism, Baerbock noted a shift among leaders who embraced the assembly’s “Better Together” motto and committed to engaging with the reform process. She insisted that “no country in the world would be better off without the UN.”

She stressed that reform begins with self-examination and constructive proposals to streamline the UN’s work and focus its resources, especially toward peace and security.

“It’s easy to say ‘reform’ and not look at yourself — at what you can contribute. So, the task for member states now is to come up with proposals on how to reduce the workload and redirect our resources more efficiently — especially toward peace and security.”

She said sustainable development is inseparable from lasting peace. “If people live in poverty, it’s a trigger for new crises. And the same goes for the climate crisis — it’s the biggest security threat of our century. If we don’t fight it together, it will only accelerate further conflict.”

High-Level Week also saw the first Syrian leader attend the General Assembly in almost 60 years. President Ahmad Al-Sharaa’s participation was widely described as historic for Syria, which had been internationally isolated for years. In his address, he pledged a “new Syria,” free of its “wretched past,” and committed to national rebuilding and reform.

As foreign minister, Baerbock was among the first European ministers to visit Damascus after Bashar Assad’s fall. Meeting twice with the Syrian president and with representatives from Syria’s diverse ethnic groups, she was convinced that “only the inclusion of all ethnic groups — Kurds, Druze, Alawites, Shiites and again, women and men — could enable this pathway of hope.”

Despite security warnings, she preferred direct engagement, inspired by the resilience of Syrian refugees and the harsh realities of places like Sednaya prison.

“It is the currency of diplomacy to meet face to face. That’s why I was there — also as a female foreign minister, the first from a European country — to speak directly with the new government about whether the international community can trust the promises that this will be a Syria for all ethnic groups.”

She added: “I felt we as an international community owe it to the millions of Syrians. I’ve met so many Syrian refugees, especially in Germany, knowing what they’ve been through — and then standing in the prison of Sednaya, again seeing what people can do to other human beings.”

Syria, she believes, exemplifies the UN’s essential role. “While many countries abandoned Syrians, it was the UN, it was UNRWA, that stayed on the ground, providing education for thousands of children, even though 40 percent of schools were destroyed.”

Baerbock acknowledged that Syria’s way forward is fragile but crucial: A constitutional process, inclusive governance, trust-building and selective lifting of sanctions.

“Nobody knows if Syria’s future will be a free one for all. But if we don’t try everything to make it so, we are responsible for the misery.”

She warned that foreign interference remains the greatest threat. “External actors are still trying to hinder this process. Interference isn’t just a violation of sovereignty — it’s the biggest threat to a peaceful, inclusive future for Syria.”

Turning to Sudan, Baerbock described the humanitarian situation as “just beyond words.” She highlighted that the extent of suffering — widespread hunger and sexual violence against women and girls — exceeds many other conflicts.

“The battle between two competing armies, and two competing generals, goes literally over the bodies of women and girls being raped over and over again,” she said.

She criticized the “negative engagement” of foreign powers prolonging the conflict through arms deliveries and political interference, thereby obstructing the UN’s peace-building role.

Her transition from German foreign minister to General Assembly president, Baerbock said, was not simply swift but uniquely valuable given her background in Middle East diplomacy.

“Without having been part of such intensive discussions and negotiations, I wouldn’t have been able to lead on such a complex and non-consensual topic,” she reflected on the two-state summit.

“It helped that I knew the French president and (Saudi Foreign Minister) Prince Faisal (bin Farhan) personally. Again, it’s about trust.”

For Baerbock, the assembly president’s job is to defend and rally support behind the UN Charter — not through neutrality, but with commitment. Yet, she acknowledges, consensus is harder to achieve today.

“Consensus is defined differently now. The ability to put yourself in others’ shoes — not just push your opinion — is the most important skill.”

Her record as a negotiator is now seen as key to her ability to marshal support for reforms. Analysts say her experience prepares her to rally former peers toward renewed multilateral cooperation.

“We didn’t come up with the idea ourselves,” she said of former ministers taking up the presidency. “It’s based on the good example of our predecessors. Years of face-to-face negotiation builds the trust you need to tackle difficult issues.

“You can handle tough topics better if you’ve been through nights of negotiation and know each other on a personal level. Not just knowing heads of government, but having their phone number. Texting them before they speak: ‘Remember to bring an example of why the UN matters to your region.’ Or texting them after they leave New York: ‘Remember to bring your reform proposal when you come back.’ You can send it with a smiley. But they know I mean it.”

Looking ahead, Baerbock will spearhead the process of selecting the next UN secretary-general, a responsibility she approaches with urgency and optimism.

Many member states, she says, support the nomination of a woman — not just for symbolism, but to reinforce the UN’s credibility on gender equity. She also notes a growing call for the General Assembly to play a greater role in selection, particularly as the Security Council remains deadlocked.

She highlighted the need for transparency, outlining that coordination with the Security Council — including current president Russia — has already begun.

“There’s a strong call for a very transparent process,” she said, reinforcing the importance of accountability and the engagement of member states.


Burkina junta arrests European NGO workers for ‘spying’

Burkina junta arrests European NGO workers for ‘spying’
Updated 2 min 5 sec ago

Burkina junta arrests European NGO workers for ‘spying’

Burkina junta arrests European NGO workers for ‘spying’
  • Those arrested included the country director of the NGO in the west African state and his deputy, Sana said
  • The NGO, based in The Hague, provides security analyzes for other humanitarian organizations

ABIDJAN: Burkina Faso’s military government said Tuesday it had arrested eight members of a humanitarian group, including three Europeans, accusing them of “spying and treason.”
Security Minister Mahamadou Sana said the eight were members of INSO, a Netherlands-based group specializing in humanitarian safety, and included a Frenchman, a French-Senegalese woman, a Czech man, a Malian and four Burkinabe nationals.
Those arrested included the country director of the NGO in the west African state and his deputy, Sana said.
The director had previously been arrested at the end of July when the NGO was suspended for three months by the authorities for “collecting sensitive data without authorization.”
The NGO, based in The Hague, provides security analyzes for other humanitarian organizations.
Sana alleged it “collected and passed on sensitive security information that could be detrimental to national security and the interests of Burkina Faso, to foreign powers.”
He said that despite being banned from operating on July 31, some members “continued to clandestinely or covertly conduct activities such as information collection and meetings in person or online.”
Burkina Faso’s military junta has turned away from the West and in particular its former colonial master France since seizing power in a September 2022 coup.
Burkinabe authorities often repress dissent, notably within civil society and the media, claiming it as part of the battle against militant violence that has plagued the country for a decade.


Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide

Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide
Updated 44 min 34 sec ago

Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide

Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide
  • Meloni said Defense Minister Guido Crosetto and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani had been denounced

ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Tuesday that she and two of her ministers had been reported to the International Criminal Court for alleged complicity in genocide in connection with Israel’s offensive in Gaza.
Speaking in an interview with state television company RAI, Meloni said Defense Minister Guido Crosetto and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani had been denounced, and “I think” also Roberto Cingolani, the head of defense group Leonardo In other remarks, Meloni said she believed that US President Donald Trump had come to the conclusion that Russia was not interested in a peace deal with Ukraine.


Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity
Updated 07 October 2025

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity
  • The European Parliament in Strasbourg backed the anti-fascist activist by 306 votes to 305 in a secret ballot
  • Salis was arrested with other activists in Budapest in February 2023

STRASBOURG: EU lawmakers on Tuesday narrowly rejected Hungary’s request to strip left-wing Italian lawmaker Ilaria Salis of her parliamentary immunity for alleged violence at a neo-Nazi rally in Budapest.
The European Parliament in Strasbourg backed the anti-fascist activist — who has become a high-profile foe of Hungary’s nationalist government — by 306 votes to 305 in a secret ballot.
“This vote is a victory for democracy, rule of law, and antifascism,” Salis said in a statement.
Salis, 41, was arrested with other activists in Budapest in February 2023 while taking part in a protest against an annual commemoration by neo-Nazis.
She was released from detention after more than a year, following her election to the EU parliament with a small leftist party in 2024.
Hungarian prosecutors requested an 11-year prison sentence and the case made international headlines when Salis appeared in a Budapest court with her feet shackled.
Salis has requested to be tried in Italy.


Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic
Updated 07 October 2025

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic
  • Humphrey Polepole went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday
  • David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction

NAIROBI: Tanzania’s police force said it was investigating reports that a former ambassador turned government critic had been kidnapped after his family said he was forcefully taken from his house.
Several critics of the government of President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who will stand for re-election on October 29, have disappeared since last year, with opposition parties alleging a campaign of abductions.
Humphrey Polepole, who resigned as ambassador to Cuba in July and has repeatedly and harshly criticized Tanzania’s ruling party in the months since, went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday, his brother, Godfrey Polepole, told Reuters.
“The main door entering the house was broken and the door to the bedroom was broken as well,” he said. “There was a lot of blood from the sitting room all the way to the bedroom and the bloodstains continued even outside toward the gate area.”
Hassan, who won plaudits after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents that was rampant under her predecessor, ordered an investigation last year into reports of abductions, but no official findings have been made public.
Government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa did not immediately respond to a phone call or text message seeking comment.
In a statement on September 29, the government rejected allegations by Human Rights Watch that it was cracking down on its critics ahead of the election and called accounts of abductions “a major source of concern for the government.”
David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction.
“The Police Force has seen the reports being circulated on social media by his relatives that he has been kidnapped. We have already begun working ... to ascertain the truth,” he said in a statement late on Monday.
After resigning as ambassador, Polepole launched a series of broadsides during online press briefings against the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), accusing it of flouting party rules by choosing Hassan as its presidential candidate, engaging in corruption and abducting government critics.
Hassan’s government has also faced human rights scrutiny over the arrest in April of Tanzania’s main opposition leader, Tundu Lissu. Lissu went on trial on Monday for treason over what prosecutors said was a speech calling on the public to rebel. He has pleaded not guilty and said the charges are politically motivated.