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Estonia and Lithuania are advancing plans for military exercises in Greenland, a territory of Denmark. This development proceeds despite previous objections from Trump, who had suggested the United States might purchase Greenland. In response to this diplomatic friction over military access to the region, Lithuania's president has proposed that a broader joint security agreement could help resolve the dispute.
NATO is reinforcing its eastern flank through enhanced air policing missions. The alliance is deploying fighter jets to Estonia and Romania and has scrambled aircraft to intercept Russian jets operating near the Baltic states. These deployments are a direct response to recent Russian military activity. Concurrently, NATO members, including Lithuania, have expressed confidence in the alliance's capacity to monitor potential threats emanating from neighboring Belarus. These actions underscore NATO's ongoing commitment to bolstering air defenses and demonstrating collective security along its eastern frontier.
3 topics | 39 sources
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated that security guarantees for his country are fully prepared, emphasizing the need for them during discussions in Vilnius, Lithuania. At the same time, NATO is strengthening its air policing missions, with Turkey deploying fighter jets to Estonia and Romania, and Lithuania expressing confidence in the alliance's ability to monitor potential threats from Belarus.
Lithuania's president has suggested that a joint security agreement could resolve a dispute over Greenland. Meanwhile, Estonia's defense minister says the country plans to participate in military exercises in Greenland, despite threats from President Donald Trump.
The European Union has officially designated Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas announced the decision while in Berlin for meetings with German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius.
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