NATO’s Ankara summit delivered a major long-term military support pledge for Ukraine, even as US President Donald Trump’s remarks on Greenland, Iran and European allies exposed the alliance’s continuing internal tensions.European NATO members and Canada are expected to provide Ukraine with at least €70 billion ($80 billion) in military support this year and maintain comparable levels of assistance in 2027, according to media reports and allied officials.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.The two-year commitment, worth at least €140 billion ($160 billion), was one of the main practical outcomes for Kyiv at the July 7-8 summit in Turkey.President Volodymyr Zelensky, who arrived in Ankara with First Lady Olena Zelenska, was greeted with applause and used the gathering to press allies for urgent air-defense supplies.NATO allies pledge long-term support for UkraineThe Ukraine funding pledge is expected to cover military equipment, training and other forms of support from 31 NATO members – all European allies and Canada – excluding the United States.The use of euros rather than dollars was seen as symbolically important, underlining that Washington is not part of the financial commitment.The figure is not expected to represent entirely new money. It will include existing bilateral aid programs, as well as funding linked to the European Union’s €90 billion ($103 billion) loan facility for Ukraine for 2026-2027.However, the pledged total is still expected to require additional financing, as current EU and bilateral programs do not fully cover the €140 billion two-year figure.