July 5, 2023
1 min read

NATO keeps Jens Stoltenberg as chief

The decision will be endorsed by NATO Heads of State and Government at the Vilnius Summit…reports Asian Lite News

NATO Allies have agreed to extend the mandate of Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg by a further year, until 1 October 2024. 

The decision will be endorsed by NATO Heads of State and Government at the Vilnius Summit, an official statement said on Tuesday.

Allies thanked the Secretary-General for his leadership and commitment, which has been critical to preserving transatlantic unity in the face of unprecedented security challenges.

Stoltenberg said: “I am honoured by the decision of NATO Allies to extend my term as Secretary General. The transatlantic bond between Europe and North America has ensured our freedom and security for nearly seventy-five years, and in a more dangerous world, our great Alliance is more important than ever.”

NATO is an intergovernmental military alliance between 31 member states – 29 European and two North American.

ALSO READ: NATO readies military plans to defend against Russia  

Previous Story

Psychiatry and battling with depression

Next Story

Sabyasachi collection at London’s iconic Lancaster House

Latest from -Top News

ED Action Sparks Congress Uprising

Demonstrations held across all state capitals and district headquarters, marking a coordinated pushback against recent legal moves, including a chargesheet in the National Herald case and the continued questioning of businessman Robert

India-Russia Tourism Hits Fast Track

Indian tourists to Russia doubled in 2024 to over 120,000, while Russian visits to India reached 160,000—surpassing 2021-22 combined. The Indian Embassy estimates mutual tourist numbers could exceed 450,000 by 2025. India

Vance to visit India next week

Vice President JD Vance and the Second Family will travel to Italy and India from April 18 to April 24 US Vice President JD Vance is scheduled to visit India next week.
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Turkish parliament ratifies Sweden’s bid to join NATO

Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban said he had invited his

Cautious optimism over Ukraine conflict, says NATO chief

Stoltenberg says a real de-escalation would mean a substantial withdrawal