Abstract

On July 11-12, 2023, NATO summit was held in Vilnius. The agenda included a wide range of issues of practical adaptation of the alliance to the "new strategic norm" in the context of implementation of its Madrid Concept of 2022. However, the specification of updated conceptual guidelines appears to be complicated by the continuing strategic uncertainty associated with developments of the military conflict in Ukraine. The Ukraine–NATO Council established in Vilnius to strengthen the enhanced partnership seems to be a machine of variable geometry, the future trajectory of which depends on assessment of strategic risks and relevant parameters of NATO's military-political planning, primarily in the context of Ukrainian conflict’s specific developments and outcomes.

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