Webinar
NATO and transatlantic relations
Watch the recording of the webinar here
NATO experienced a considerable crisis during the Trump presidency with significant consequences for transatlantic relations. The Trump term intensified existing cleavages within the alliance over burden-sharing and defense spending, but also introduced new dilemmas over the focus of the alliance. Should NATO still primarily focus on Russia, or should the alliance also play a role in managing the rise of China?
We are now about 11 months into the new Biden administration. What has the change in administrations meant for these challenges for NATO? How have the European NATO members responded? And how can the new strategic concept currently being developed be expected to guide the course of the Alliance towards 2030?
Join us online for a panel discussion on these issues.
Speakers
Lars Cramer-Larsen, Lieutenant Colonel & Associated Senior Analyst at DIIS
Maria Mälksoo, Senior Researcher, CMS, University of Copenhagen
Leonard Schütte, Visiting Researcher, University of Oxford and PhD Candidate, University of Maastricht
Mikkel Runge Olesen, Senior Researcher, DIIS
Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard, Senior Researcher, DIIS
Programme
10.00-10.05 Welcome and introduction, Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard
10.05-10.20 Trans-Atlantic relations during times of persistent strategic competition, pervasive instability and strategic chocks, Lars Cramer-Larsen
10.20-10.35 Back to Normality or Back to Reality, Maria Mälksoo
10.35-10.50 Why NATO survived Trump and the lessons for the alliance’s future, Leonard Schütte
10.50-11.05 How to be a good NATO ally anno 2021: Finding a new niche for Denmark, Mikkel Runge Olesen
11.05-12.00 Q&A - moderated by Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard
The video was recorded on Tuesday 14 December 2021, 10.00-12.00 on Zoom.