As NATO leaders wrapped up their 36th summit in Ankara this week, Russian state and state-aligned media offered a portrait of an alliance simultaneously hardening its posture toward Moscow and fraying at the seams — a dual narrative that dominated Russian coverage over the past 24 hours. A "Long-Term Threat" Designation Takes Center Stage The most-cited element of Russian coverage was the summit's draft final declaration, which multiple Russian outlets — relaying reporting from Reuters and Euronews — noted would formally label Russia a "long-term threat" to Euro-Atlantic security and stability, alongside a reaffirmation of Article 5 collective-defense commitments. A widely circulated piece carried by Rambler News described the declaration as fixing new "rules of the game" for decades to come, tying the Russia designation to a parallel pledge of €70 billion in defense assistance to Ukraine for 2026, with a comparable commitment implied for 2027. InoSMI,...
The NATO summit held in Ankara on July 7-8 marks the formal launch of what alliance officials are calling "NATO 3.0" — but according to prominent Turkish journalist Murat Yetkin, this label is really shorthand for the opening of a second Cold War, one in which democratic backsliding in member states is treated as a secondary concern. Writing in the Yetkin Report on July 7, Murat Yetkin argues that viewed through this lens, the ongoing legal cases against Turkey's main opposition CHP party and Istanbul mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu no longer appear contradictory to Turkey's NATO role. He notes that President Trump's renewed warnings about "the communist threat" during America's 250th anniversary speech fit the same framework, as does NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte's own choice to walk hand-in-hand with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Ankara despite raising press-freedom concerns. Strategic and military imperatives, Yetkin writes, tend to override righ...