Albanese is among four Asia-Pacific leaders – along with Korea,Japan and New Zealand - invited to the two-day summit of the North Atlantic Alliance in Madrid,which will help shape the military pact’s posturing over the coming decade.
His comments coincided with the Group of Seven club of wealthy nations vow on Mondayto stand with Ukraine “for as long as it takes”,promising to tighten the squeeze on Russia’s finances with new sanctions that include a proposal to cap the price of Russian oil.
NATO also announced it would boost the number of troops on high alert in Eastern Europe by sevenfold to more than 300,000,as the alliance prepared to adopt a new strategy describing Moscow as a “direct threat”.
The announcement came after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky,addressing G7 leaders in the Bavarian Alps via a video link,asked for more weapons and air defences to gain the upper hand in the war within months.
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Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the global economic fallout,such as soaring energy and food prices,has dominated this year’s meeting of the leaders of Germany,the US,France,Italy,Canada,Japan and Britain.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday he expected allies to make clear they consider Russia “as the most significant and direct threat to our security”,but that the group’s new strategic concept would also address for the first time the security challenges posed by Russia and China in its allies’ “southern neighbourhood”.