John E. Herbst: At Warsaw, NATO agrees to thwart Putin’s revisionist dreams
Bulgaria's special operations forces ride hummers during a military training exercise \"Inflexible courage\" near the village of Tsrancha on June 23, 2016.
NATO leaders finally demonstrated at the Warsaw Summit on July 8 and 9 that they understand the dangers of a revisionist Kremlin, and they approved significant measures to resist it. Unlike the Wales Summit in 2014, which noted that ISIS was an "existential threat to NATO" but made no similar claims about the marauding nuclear superpower threatening Europe, the Warsaw Summit statement focused principally on the danger Moscow's behavior poses to NATO, Europe, and global security.