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2022 Madrid summit

NATO Summit Madrid 2022
2022 Madrid Summit
Host countrySpain
Date29–30 June 2022
Venue(s)Institución Ferial de Madrid
CitiesMadrid
Follows2022 Brussels extraordinary summit
Precedes2023 Vilnius summit
Websitewww.nato.int

The 2022 Madrid summit was 31st summit of the heads of state and heads of government of the thirty members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), their partner countries, and the European Union, held in Madrid, Spain, on 29–30 June 2022.[1][2] Spain previously hosted a NATO Summit in 1997.

Background

On 8 October 2021, following a meeting with NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg, Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez announced the celebration of the ordinary summit in Madrid in 2022, a date otherwise underscoring the 40th anniversary of Spain's NATO membership.[3] NATO disclosed the summit's logo on 29 March 2022.[4] The meeting was scheduled to occur several months after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[5][6]

Summit

In the wake of the two days of preparation for the summit in mid June 2022, Jens Stoltenberg reported that key areas to be addressed in the summit include "strengthened deterrence and defence; support for Ukraine and other partners at risk; a new NATO Strategic Concept; better burden-sharing and resourcing; and Finland and Sweden's historic applications for membership".[7]

Venue and security

The summit was held at Pavilions 9 and 10 of the IFEMA fairgrounds.[8] Over 25,000 police agents were deployed in the city.[8] The celebration of Madrid's LGBT Pride was postponed one week due to the summit.[8] The Spanish Ministries of Interior and Foreign Affairs allocated around €37 million without public tender for security enhancement of the summit, including the acquisition of 6,000 taser chargers.[9]

2022 Strategic Concept

NATO's strategic concept, the 10-year blueprint underpinning the alliance's security challenges in the evolving global landscape and outlining the NATO political and military tasks set to address them, was adopted at the summit, thereby replacing the strategic concept adopted at the 2010 Lisbon summit.[10][11][12] The 2010 document makes mention of "peace in the Euro-Atlantic area" and "the threat of a conventional attack on NATO territory [being] low", showing the outdated nature of the previous strategic concept.[13] Gitanas Nausėda, the president of Lithuania, wants the next strategic concept to consider Russia a "long-term threat to the entire Euro-Atlantic area."[14] The United States hopes the document will also have forceful language on China.[15]

The strategic blueprint updated Russia's status (hitherto considered a "strategic partner") as the "most significant and direct threat to Allies' security and to peace and stability in the Euro-Atlantic area".[16] Likewise, China was described in the document as a challenge to allies' "interests, security and values".[16]

EU–NATO interactions

On 29 June, leaders of member states from both the European Union and NATO attended a dinner hosted by Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez in Madrid. During the summit, Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin met bileraterally with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, Icelandic Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir, and Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer,[17] the latter of which also met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.[18]

Finnish and Swedish accession bids

  Finland and Sweden
  NATO

In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and a subsequent tilt in the public opinion of Finland and Sweden, the prospect of both countries applying for NATO membership before the summit was raised.[19][20] On 12 May, Sauli Niinistö and Sanna Marin, respectively the president and prime minister of Finland, issued a joint statement that "Finland must apply for NATO membership without delay".[21] On 16 May, Magdalena Andersson, prime minister of Sweden, announced that Sweden will apply for membership.[22] Both countries submitted their NATO applications on 18 May, yet there was the looming prospect of a Turkish block to accession talks, reportedly over concerns related to Finnish and Swedish relations with the YPG, which Turkey considers a Syrian branch of the PKK.[23][24] On 19 May, Finnish President Niinistö and Swedish Prime Minister Andersson announced that they were ready to address Turkey's security concerns and that they always condemned terrorism.[25][26]

On 28 June, the first day of the summit, the Turkish delegation dropped their opposition to Finland and Sweden's NATO membership applications and signed a tripartite memorandum addressing Turkey's concerns regarding arms exports and the Kurdish–Turkish conflict.[27] As part of the agreement, Finland and Sweden will support Turkey's participation in PESCO's Military Mobility project.[28] Finland and Sweden also affirmed that the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) is "a terrorist organization".[29] On 29 June, NATO extended a formal invitation to Finland and Sweden to join the alliance.[30] On 30 June, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that Sweden had made a "promise" to extradite "73 terrorists" to Turkey. Swedish Prime Minister Andersson refused to deny Turkey's claim that Sweden had promised to deport political refugees and opponents wanted by Erdoğan's government.[31]

Regional defense

Ahead of the summit, the Bucharest Nine made a joint declaration on 10 June 2022, calling for forward defense in NATO's eastern flank.[32] The summit may also see the alliance expand the NATO Response Force from 40,000[13] to "well over 300,000".[33] Kaja Kallas, the prime minister of Estonia, hopes that NATO will increase its troop presence with a division of 20,000 to 25,000 soldiers in each of the Baltic states to defend the territory of each state against a potential Russian invasion.[34] Meanwhile, Nausėda's looking to increase the Baltic contingent to the size of a brigade, much less than what Kallas called for.[14] Under preexisting plans, only about a thousand foreign soldiers are present in each state.[34] The Spanish government wants NATO to also consider regional security to the south, particularly concerning migration from Africa, Islamist groups in the Sahel, and Russian mercenaries operating in the region.[35]

On 29 June, the second day of the summit, United States President Joe Biden announced that the US would establish a permanent military base in Poland that would serve as the headquarters of V Corps and provide two additional F-35 squadrons in the United Kingdom, another brigade in Romania, and air defense systems in Italy and Germany.[36] The White House also reported a 50% increase (4 to 6) in the number of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers deployed in Naval Station Rota.[37]

On 30 June, British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, announced the United Kingdom's defence spending would increase from 2.3% of GDP in 2022 to 2.5% of GDP in 2030. The UK will also provide 1000 additional troops and a Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carrier to NATO's Eastern flank.[38][39]

Protests

On 26 June 2022, several thousand people gathered in Madrid to protest against NATO, calling for the dissolution of the organisation and the closure of US military bases in Spain. A protest planned for the first day of the summit was banned by the Spanish government.[40]

Participants

Heads of State, heads of Government, Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Ministers of Defence from a total of forty-eight countries (thirty-four in Europe, nine in Asia, two in North America, two in Oceania and one in Africa) plus the European Union were invited to participate in the Summit.

Family photo of the 2022 Madrid summit.
Working session of the leaders in the facilities of IFEMA in Madrid.
Jens Stoltenberg with Pacific countries which are NATO global partners
Sauli Niinistö with Ursula von der Leyen and others EU officials
Key
Non-NATO member
Country or
organization
Head of Delegation Title Ref.
 NATO Jens Stoltenberg Secretary General [41]
 Albania Edi Rama Prime Minister [42]
 Australia[a] Anthony Albanese Prime Minister [47]
 Austria[a] Karl Nehammer Chancellor [48]
 Belgium Alexander De Croo Prime Minister [48]
 Bosnia and Herzegovina[a] [46]
 Bulgaria Rumen Radev President [49]
 Canada Justin Trudeau Prime Minister [50]
 Croatia Zoran Milanović President [51]
 Cyprus[a] Nikos Anastasiadis President [52]
 Czech Republic Petr Fiala Prime Minister [53]
 Denmark Mette Frederiksen Prime Minister [54]
 Estonia Kaja Kallas Prime Minister [55]
 European Union[a] Charles Michel Council President [45]
Ursula von der Leyen Commission President [45]
 Finland[a] Sauli Niinistö President [56]
 France Emmanuel Macron President [57]
 Georgia[a] Irakli Garibashvili Prime Minister [45]
 Germany Olaf Scholz Chancellor [58]
 Greece Kyriakos Mitsotakis Prime Minister [59]
 Hungary Viktor Orbán Prime Minister [60]
 Iceland Katrín Jakobsdóttir Prime Minister [61]
 Ireland[a] Micheál Martin Taoiseach [62]
 Italy Mario Draghi Prime Minister [63]
 Japan[a] Fumio Kishida Prime Minister [64]
 Jordan[a] [46]
 Latvia Egils Levits President [65]
 Lithuania Gitanas Nausėda President [66]
 Luxembourg Xavier Bettel Prime Minister [67]
 Malta[a] Robert Abela Prime Minister [68]
 Mauritania[a] [46]
 Montenegro Milo Đukanović President [69]
 Netherlands Mark Rutte Prime Minister [70]
 New Zealand[a] Jacinda Ardern Prime Minister [71]
 North Macedonia Stevo Pendarovski President [72]
 Norway Jonas Gahr Støre Prime Minister [73]
 Philippines[a] Rodrigo Duterte President
 Poland Andrzej Duda President [74]
 Portugal António Costa Prime Minister [75]
 Romania Klaus Iohannis President [76]
 Slovakia Zuzana Čaputová President [77]
 Slovenia Robert Golob Prime Minister [78]
 South Korea[a] Yoon Suk-yeol President [64]
 Spain Pedro Sánchez (host) Prime Minister [79]
 Sweden[a] Magdalena Andersson Prime Minister [80]
 Thailand[a] Prayut Chan-o-cha Prime Minister
 Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan President
 Ukraine[b] Volodymyr Zelenskyy President [83]
 United Kingdom Boris Johnson Prime Minister [84]
 United States Joe Biden President [85]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Australia, Austria, Cyprus, Finland, Georgia, Ireland, Japan, Malta, New Zealand, the Philippines, South Korea, Sweden, the Republic of China (Taiwan) and Thailand were not member states of NATO but were invited to attend and participate in the summit. The presidents of the European Council and European Commission were also invited,[43][44][45] as well as the ministers of Jordan, Mauritania and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[46]
  2. ^ President Zelenskyy was invited to the summit and made an appearance via video link.[82]

Other events

Family photo of the dignitaries and their companions at the Museo del Prado with Las Meninas.

On the evening of 28 June 2022, King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia welcomed the heads of State and Government and their companions at the Royal Palace, where they hosted a state dinner, as the opening of the summit.[86] That same evening, the Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs José Manuel Albares and the Spanish Minister of Defence Margarita Robles, received their counterparts at the Santa Cruz Palace, where they hosted a welcome dinner by chef José Andrés.[87]

On the evening of 29 June, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez received the heads of State and Government and their companions at the Museo del Prado, where they held an informal working dinner at the cloister of Saint Jerome, also by chef José Andrés, while their companions dined in another room of the museum. That same evening, the Ministers of Foreign Affairs and the Ministers of Defence held informal working dinners at the Santa Cruz Palace.[86]

During the summit, Queen Letizia held several private events and visits for the dignitaries' companions. These included visits to the Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso, the Royal Factory of Glass and Crystal of La Granja, the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía and the Teatro Real.[88]

See also

References

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