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Europe leaders reaffirm unity on defence ahead of Ankara NATO summit

By FRANCE 24 - RFI
Europe Polands Prime Minister Donald Tusk, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Britains Prime Minister Keir Starmer attend a press conference at the E5 NATO Summit in Berlin on June 24, 2026. -  Ebrahim Noroozi, AP
THU, 25 JUN 2026
Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer attend a press conference at the E5 NATO Summit in Berlin on June 24, 2026. - © Ebrahim Noroozi, AP

European leaders reaffirmed on Wednesday ⁠their commitment to ​a stronger defence partnership ahead of next month's NATO summit in Ankara, following a series of spats with US ​President Donald Trump and tensions among the main European members.

They also offered a warm farewell to outgoing British Prime Minister Keir Starmer after he announced this week he would step down amid growing discontent in his ​party.

German Chancellor ‌Friedrich Merz, who invited the leaders of Britain, France, Italy and Poland to ⁠Berlin, said the NATO summit on July 7-8 would be the moment to demonstrate Europe's determination to take a stronger leadership role in defence.

"We ‌want to renew the Alliance. We are strengthening its European pillar," Merz said as ⁠the leaders made brief remarks before meeting over dinner.

A joint statement "affirmed their unwavering commitment to Euro-Atlantic security and the transatlantic bond".

Behind the messages of unity, Merz's invitation to Berlin came ​after several incidents that laid bare tensions over defence and security issues among ‌the main European partners.

Berlin and Paris have seen their long-delayedFCAS joint fighter project abandoned over strategic and management disagreements, underlining the difficulties Europe has faced in joining forces to rebuild its defences as Trump has increasingly turned ‌away from NATO.

Watch more End of FCAS 'flagship project' marks setback for Franco-German cooperation and European defence

In recent months, Washington has criticised the alliance for its reluctance to support the US-Israeli war on Iran and threatened to draw ​down troops in Europe.

Read more US will review its military presence in Europe, Hegseth tells NATO

Germany, France and Britain, the so-called E3 group, have also faced criticism from some European capitals, including Rome and Warsaw, that they have kept other countries from talks with Ukraine.

Merz, who ​has previously insisted that the E3 arrangement is intended to ensure Europe can act quickly, did ​not address differences directly but stressed the aim of reinforcing a joint approach, ​including a strong partnership with the United States.

"We are travelling this path together," he said, adding, "Unilateral national actions in our defence policy would ​be a mistake."

He said he would speak to Trump and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as well as other partners to inform them of the discussions on Wednesday.

Read more NATO's Rutte aims to soothe Trump on White House visit ahead of July summit

The leaders offered warm tributes to Starmer, who had sought to strengthen ties with Europe after Britain's referendum to leave the European Union a decade ago.

Read more 'Significant damage': How Brexit is still draining the UK economy 10 years later

"We have become ⁠one in many ways again," said Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk. "Thanks to your work, it was possible to forget about Brexit ⁠for a moment. I ​will remember that for a long time."

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)

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