NATO MULTIMEDIA ACCOUNT

Access NATO’s broadcast-quality video content free of charge

Register

Create an account

Create an account

Check your inbox and enter verification code

We have sent a verification code to your email address. . Enter the code to verify your account. This code will expire in 30 minutes.
Verification code

Didn't receive a code? Send new Code

You have successfully created your account

From now on you can download videos from our website

Subscribe to our newsletter

If you would also like to subscribe to the newsletter and receive our latest updates, click on the button below.

Reset password

Enter the email address you registered with and we will send you a code to reset your password.

Reset password
Check your inbox and enter verification code
We have sent a verification code to your email address. Enter the code to verify your account. This code will expire in 30 minutes.
Verification code

Didn't receive a code? Send new Code

Create a new password

The password must be at least 12 characters long, no spaces, include upper/lowercase letters, numbers and symbols.

Your password has been updated

Click the button to return to the page you were on and log in with your new password.

This week, Ukraine sent a warship to the Mediterranean to assist NATO’s Operation Active Endeavour, which aims to detect and deter terrorist activity in the region. The ship’s crew will participate in surge operations, helping to monitor civilian shipping, collecting and analysing information on suspicious vessels and accompanying ships carrying important cargo if required.

The corvette “Ternopil” is joining the Standing NATO Maritime Group 2 (SNMG2), whose ships are moving eastwards following intensive operations in the Western and Central Mediterranean. Along with submarine and air surveillance, SNMG2 will track shipping activity from the Greek island of Crete to the far-eastern reaches of the Mediterranean Sea.

Operation Active Endeavour was launched under Article V (the collective-defence clause in NATO's founding treaty), which was invoked for the first time by the Alliance after 9/11.

“Our operations are a lot about networking now,” says Italian naval Commander Alfonso Citarella, Chief of the Maritime Operations Centre (MOC) at NATO’s Maritime Command in Naples, Italy. “It’s an increasingly useful way to get the big picture of a very busy shipping area.” The MOC receives and analyses more than 5000 shipping tracks a day.

After Russia, Ukraine is the second NATO partner country to assist Active Endeavour and it is the sixth time that a Ukrainian ship has joined Operation Active Endeavour.

NATO-Ukraine relations were formally launched in 1991, when Ukraine joined the North Atlantic Cooperation Council (now the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council). In 1994, It became the first of the Commonwealth of Independent States to join NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme.