Also, any Brits know how good The Times is? Like is it NYT/WaPo credible or is it Daily Mail credible?
Generally a good reputation. One of the big quality papers in the UK, and arguably the most respected in general. Centre to right-of-centre and owned by Murdoch but with legally guaranteed independence for their editorial teams, with a good reputation for investigative journalism. Despite being generally supportive of the Conservatives they haven't hesitated to publish extremely damaging stories for Tory governments. They've been caught up in their own scandals (and some of the general Murdoch ones) but remain up there when it comes to trusted papers.
Note that this was in the Sunday Times, owned by the same group but independent again. It's a pretty incredible paper to see in person (mostly back when I was growing up) given it is huge and comes with multiple magazines and inserts. It tries to serve as the only paper you need each week.
This image shows what comes with a single edition. It was a paper that could be shared among the entire household, even with a whole section for kids cartoons (
the Funday Times) Their iPad app apparently updates 500MB of content a week.
Regarding NATO, worth remembering that only one nation has even invoked the mutual defence provisions of NATO due to being attacked.
It was the US after 9/11.The US also benefits from NATO in very direct ways;Washington’s European allies have also taken on military and stabilization missions that protect American interests but that the U.S. military does not want to perform. From 2002 to 2014, the European Union or individual EU members deployed military and civilian assets for numerous peacekeeping, policing, monitoring, and capacity building missions. These operations took place in Europe, Africa and Asia—from the Balkans, Georgia, Sudan, and the Sahel to the Gaza strip, Indonesia, and the waters of the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. The Europeans dedicate more forces than the United States to Balkan peacekeeping—a job American forces would prefer not perform. If Europe (and especially the French, for example) were not operating in Africa (e.g. Mali), a greater burden would fall on the United States and common Western security could be undermined.
Fourth, the United States gets real fiscal advantages out of the NATO security architecture. It saves the United States taxpayer money to base roughly 85,000 military personnel in Europe which might otherwise have to be deployed in the United States. They help to defray a large part of the tab for stationing U.S. forces in Europe – a bill the American taxpayer would otherwise have to pay. In Germany, where many of the largest U.S. bases in Europe are located, the government provides tax waivers and rent-free use of facilities to American forces. Germany also builds roads and other infrastructure to support American installations. And the Germans, along with other allies, make a substantial contribution to the NATO Infrastructure Program, the alliance’s commonly funded military construction that has built critical facilities (e.g. airfields, shelters, common communications, and air defense installations) throughout its territory.
I'd strongly recommend reading the whole thing.