NATO launches Arctic Sentinel mission amid tensions with Trump

The Atlantic Alliance has announced the deployment of Operation Arctic Sentinel to bolster its presence in the region, in response to growing Russian and Chinese activity, while attempting to address Donald Trump's interests in Greenland. This initiative comes as trust within NATO is broken. Meanwhile, the United States adopts a contradictory stance at the Defense Ministers' meeting in Brussels.

NATO launched Operation Arctic Sentinel on Wednesday, a mission aimed at turning the Arctic into a front line against growing Russian military activity and increasing Chinese interest. 'For NATO, the Arctic is no longer a distant periphery, it is a front line,' explained a high-ranking military officer of the Alliance. This initiative is part of an effort to satisfy Donald Trump's appetite for Greenland, as the U.S. president's annexation threat has created unease within the organization. An American officer under the NATO banner deflected embarrassedly: 'One would have to ask the United States.'

This operation echoes recent deployments on Europe's eastern flank and in the Baltic, in response to Russian incursions and Moscow's hybrid activities. However, trust is broken, marking an existential crisis for NATO.

Meanwhile, at the Defense Ministers' meeting in Brussels, the United States adopted a contradictory discourse. U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth did not attend the meeting, being represented by Elbridge Colby, Under Secretary for Policy and theorist of U.S. disengagement from Europe. The new U.S. strategy, published last month, aims to strengthen NATO by obliging member countries to take on more of the continent's conventional defense, allowing the United States to focus on the Pacific. Officially, this strengthens the Alliance, but it implies a partial withdrawal of U.S. troops from Europe.

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President Trump gestures emphatically to NATO chief Mark Rutte during a meeting, phone showing criticism of alliance amid Iran ceasefire threats.
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