Turkey says NATO adjusting to security landscape, US not withdrawing

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ANKARA, June 30 (Reuters) – NATO is adjusting to a shifting security landscape and the United States is not seeking to leave the alliance, ​Turkish Defence Minister Yasar Guler told Reuters ahead ​of a NATO summit in Ankara next week.
Turkey ⁠will host 32 NATO leaders, as well as officials from ​the Gulf and Asia-Pacific region, on July 7-8, amid ​tensions within the alliance over burden-sharing, defence spending, and U.S. complaints about allies’ lack of involvement in re-opening the Strait of Hormuz.
In ​written responses to questions, Guler said the summit would ​focus on bloc unity, evaluating allies’ increased defence spending, bolstering defence ‌industry ⁠cooperation and increasing support for Ukraine. Ankara should be involved in European defence initiatives, he added.
“NATO continues to be an unparalleled and fundamental platform for Euro-Atlantic security and ​defence. We ​evaluate the period ⁠we are going through not as a crisis, but as a process of adjusting ​to the changing security environment,” Guler said.
He ​said ⁠the U.S. had no intention of withdrawing from NATO, but that it wanted European allies and Canada to assume ⁠more responsibility ​for the security of Europe, ​which he said must include Ankara in its defence plans and initiatives.

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