The NATO summit in Ankara, scheduled for July 7–8, is expected to finalize a declaration designating Russia as a threat to Euro-Atlantic security and committing member states to provide Ukraine with €70 billion annually in military support over the next two years (€140 billion total). This commitment, primarily pushed by Germany, includes both new financial pledges and existing obligations such as the EU’s €90 billion loan package. The declaration will also recognize Ukraine not just as a recipient of NATO security assistance but as a provider of security for European allies. While some European countries have been hesitant to take on additional financial commitments, all NATO members appear to have reached an agreement on this key point. The final version of the declaration is expected to be confirmed by Friday, July 3.
Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about NATO's planned declaration, including the designation of Russia as a threat and financial commitments to Ukraine. It does not exhibit overtly biased language, one-sided sourcing, or omission of context. The framing remains neutral, focusing on reported,




