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Live Blog: NATO's Warsaw Summit

Key Points

-- U.S. President Barack Obama said there can be “no business as usual” with Russia until it “fully implements” the agreement aimed at ending the war between Kyiv’s forces and Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

-- NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has called on Russia to halt its "political, military and financial support for separatists" battling Ukrainian forces in the east of the country as the alliance reaffirmed its support for the Kyiv government.

-- NATO leaders agreed to continue training Afghan security forces into 2017, prolonging a support mission in a country that the alliance chief said "still faces serious instability and violence" a decade and a half after the Taliban was driven from power.

-- NATO leaders have endorsed a major new deployment of armed forces to Eastern Europe.

* NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Warsaw (GMT/UTC +2)

11:25 9.7.2016

And on Russia:

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg says the alliance stands united in its policy of "strong defense and constructive dialogue" toward Russia.

"The alliance is united, we stand together in our approach," he told a news conference on July 9, the second day of a two-day NATO summit in Warsaw.

Stoltenberg said this was the "main message" from a meeting NATO leaders held late on July 8 to discuss Russia's increasingly assertive stance.

"I am very pleased to see how strong that message is in NATO and how united we are behind that message," he said.

Asked whether NATO viewed Russia as a threat, Stoltenberg said the alliance doesn't see any "imminent threat against any NATO ally" but does not enjoy the "strategic partnership" with Russia that he said NATO has sought to develop since the end of the Cold War.

"We are in a new situation which is different to anything else we have experienced before," he said.

His comments come one day after NATO leaders endorsed a major new deployment of armed forces to Eastern Europe, the largest such move by the alliance since the end of the Cold War.

Stoltenberg said in July 8 that the move was a response to Russia's support of separatists in eastern Ukraine and its illegal annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

The four multinational battalions of up to 1,000 troops will be led by Canada, Germany, Britain, and the United States. They will be stationed in Poland and the three Baltic states.

The NATO-Russia Council, which was set up in the 1990s to address Russia’s misgivings about the alliance expanding eastward, is to meet next week for the second time this year. The council was suspended in 2014 following Russia’s seizure of Crimea.

Based on Reuters and live streaming from the NATO summit in Warsaw.

10:28 9.7.2016

10:27 9.7.2016

10:26 9.7.2016

From our news desk:

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg says the alliance will continue training Afghan security forces into 2017 and fund them until 2020.

"Afghanistan does not stand alone and we are committed for the long haul," he told a news conference on the second day of a NATO summit in Warsaw, Poland.

Stoltenberg stressed that the Resolute Support Mission is a noncombat mission aimed at training, assisting, and advising the Afghan military and police.

"I think it is extremely important to understand that we ended our combat mission at the end of 2014 because we, over several years, had built up a national Afghan army and security forces able to take full responsibility for security in their own country," he said.

Some 12,000 NATO and U.S. troops are currently involved in the training mission.

Stoltenberg added that NATO allies have promised the United States they will contribute around $1 billion a year over the next three years to help fund Afghan security forces.

"We now have in place the $1 billion of non-U.S. commitments," he said.

10:06 9.7.2016

Key takeaways from Stoltenberg's press conference:

* NATO doesn't see any "imminent threat against any NATO ally."

* The Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan will continue beyond 2016.

10:05 9.7.2016

09:48 9.7.2016

LATEST: NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg says the Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan will continue beyond 2016.

09:39 9.7.2016

You can watch the NATO secretary-general's press conference here.

09:36 9.7.2016

Stoltenberg is speaking now:

09:24 9.7.2016

Here is our latest wrap-up of the summit from our news desk:

LONG Afghanistan, Ukraine On NATO Summit Agenda

By RFE/RL

WARSAW -- NATO leaders shifted the focus to conflict-plagued Afghanistan and Ukraine on Day Two of a summit that produced a plan to deploy military forces to member-states near the border of an increasingly assertive Russia.

The 28-nation Western alliance is set to extend its Resolute Support mission, which trains and advises Afghan security forces following the withdrawal of the bulk of foreign troops at the end of 2014.

NATO is also expected to continue financing Afghan forces with about $4 billion a year through 2020.

“We are committed to assisting the Afghan forces to secure their country and to ensure it never again becomes a safe haven for international terrorism,” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said ahead of the July 8-9 summit in Warsaw.

U.S.-led forces entered Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks in 2001 and drove the Taliban, which had harbored Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, from power. But the insurgents have not been defeated and by some accounts now hold more territory than at any time since 2001.

U.S. President Barack Obama announced on July 6 that the United States would keep 8,400 troops in Afghanistan through the end of his term in January 2017, the latest in a series of decisions to slow the drawdown of U.S. forces there.

Ahead of the NATO summit, Obama said his decision “should encourage more allies and partners to affirm their commitment to the NATO mission to train Afghan forces.”

Resolute Support now involves about 13,000 troops from 39 countries.

In the afternoon of the second and final day of the Warsaw summit, alliance leaders are to meet with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko for a session of the NATO-Ukraine Commission.

NATO’s moves to bolster its defenses in the east have been prompted largely by concerns about the intentions of Russia, which seized the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in March 2014 and backs separatists whose war with Kyiv’s forces has killed more than 9,300 people in eastern Ukraine since that April.

A French- and German-brokered peace deal known as the Minsk agreement imposed a cease-fire, but it is violated frequently and the separatists continue to hold parts of Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Progress on political aspects of the Minsk agreement, which was meant to resolve the conflict and restore Kyiv’s control over Ukraine’s entire border with Russia, has been slow.

On the first day of the summit, July 8, NATO leaders from the 28 members formally authorized four multinational battalions of up to 1,000 troops to be stationed on a rotating basis in Poland and the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.

They will be led by the United States, Canada, Britain, and Germany.

“Russia’s aggression against Ukraine threatens our vision of a Europe that is whole, free, and at peace,” Obama wrote in a commentary published on the Financial Times website on July 8. He said NATO must “reaffirm our determination -- our duty…to defend every NATO ally.”

The U.S.-led battalion comes on top of an additional armored U.S. brigade, which U.S. officials announced earlier this year would begin rotating into Eastern Europe on a regular basis. That brings the number of fully manned U.S. combat brigades with a presence in Europe to three. A brigade comprises about 4,200 to 4,500 troops.

Russia’s interference in Ukraine has increased concerns in Poland and the three Baltic states, which were under Moscow’s thumb until the collapse of communism and the disintegration of the Soviet Union a quarter-century ago. All are now NATO members.

In addition to military force, Western governments say that under President Vladimir Putin, Russia has used cyberattacks, propaganda, and other methods in an effort to destabilize European countries and undermine Western unity.

Russia has criticized NATO’s deployment plans.

Konstantin Kosachyov, chairman of the foreign policy committee in the upper parliament house, likened them to “building a dam in the desert,” and Putin’s spokesman said on July 8 that it was “absurd to speak of a threat from Russia.”

Stoltenberg said that "NATO does not seek confrontation” and will “continue to seek meaningful and constructive dialogue" with Russia. He and other NATO leaders say Russia’s actions in Ukraine have forced the alliance to bolster its defenses.

Obama said that “even as our nations remain open to a more constructive relationship with Russia, we should agree that sanctions on Russia must remain in place until Moscow fully implements its obligations” under the Minsk agreement.

The NATO-Russia Council, which was set up in the 1990s to address Russia’s misgivings about the alliance expanding eastward, is to meet next week for the second time this year. The council was suspended in 2014 following Russia’s seizure of Crimea.

With reporting by Reuters, dpa, AP, AFP, and Interfax

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