NATO summit: Security deals outweigh shared values
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NATO leaders met in Ankara this week. The result was a series of new arms agreements.
These deals show a clear shift. Military needs now matter more than shared democratic values.
The old idea was simple: Democracies trust each other. They build institutions together. They share power based on common values.
But the summit proved this is no longer the main rule. Security concerns now drive decisions.
NATO allies are focusing on real-world threats. They are buying weapons and making deals based on what protects them today. Ideals are taking a back seat to hard security.
The message from Ankara is clear. In today's world, realism wins over values.