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By Daniel J. Wakin
Opinion writer
If the meeting of NATO heads of state in The Hague needed a catchy movie title, it could be “The Summit of Fear.”
At a gathering shadowed by the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, the fears dominating this week’s NATO meeting fall in two camps: the fear of offending, or at least alienating, Donald Trump, the president of the alliance's most powerful partner, and the fears of NATO countries near Russia that President Vladimir Putin’s aggression could spread to them.












