President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Monday that Euro-Atlantic security was at a "historic turning point," calling on NATO allies to strengthen solidarity and warning that mounting conflicts, terrorism and irregular migration require a new approach to collective security.
Speaking at a luncheon at the NATO Parliamentary Summit in Istanbul, Erdoğan said the gathering carried added significance ahead of the NATO leaders' summit scheduled for July 7-8 in Ankara.
"The Euro-Atlantic security architecture is at a historic crossroads," Erdoğan said. "Wars, crises, terrorism and irregular migration, particularly along NATO's eastern and southeastern borders, require us to reshape our understanding of security."
He said traditional assumptions about global politics and security were no longer sufficient in a world marked by growing instability and uncertainty.
Erdoğan argued that recent conflicts, particularly in Gaza and Lebanon, had exposed the limitations of existing international institutions while reinforcing the importance of NATO's deterrence and unity.











