NATO struggles in the shadows to find new leader
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[May 27, 2023]
By Andrew Gray
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The race to be the next NATO boss is heating up.
But it is a race run largely in the dark, with no sign of a winner yet.
Jens Stoltenberg, the transatlantic military alliance's Norwegian
secretary-general, is due to step down at the end of September after
nine years in post.
Many alliance members would like his succession settled at, or even
before, a NATO summit in Lithuania in mid-July.
That does not give NATO's 31 nations, spanning from the United States
through new member Finland to Turkey, much time to forge the consensus
needed to pick a new leader. They could also ask Stoltenberg to extend
his term for a fourth time.
Whoever takes the reins will do so at a critical time, facing the twin
challenges of keeping allies together in supporting Ukraine while
guarding against any escalation that would draw NATO directly into a war
with Russia.
British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace declared last week that he would
like the job. But, as some governments push for a first female NATO
secretary-general, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen is also
emerging as a serious contender.
Though a very public role, the contest is extremely opaque, played out
mainly in consultations among leaders and diplomats. Those consultations
continue until all NATO members agree they have reached a consensus.
Jamie Shea, a former senior NATO official who served with the alliance
for 38 years, said leaders will be looking for a highly skilled
politician, communicator and diplomat.
"Keeping the family together, keeping everybody on board constantly,
being in touch with all of the allies to make sure that you're
addressing their concerns, is an important part of the job," said Shea,
now with the Chatham House think tank.
WALLACE AND FREDERIKSEN
Many diplomats see Wallace as a long shot for the job, although he is
widely respected across the alliance. The desire to pick a woman counts
against him with some members.
Many would also prefer a former prime minister or president to ensure
NATO's boss has top-level political clout. Stoltenberg, 64, was prime
minister of Norway.
And some, notably France, want someone from a European Union country,
hoping for closer cooperation between NATO and the EU.
Frederiksen meets all of the above criteria. Although she says she is
not a candidate, she has stopped short of saying she is not interested
in the job. NATO diplomats say that behind the scenes she is being
seriously considered.
Frederiksen's name first surfaced publicly in a report by Norwegian
newspaper VG last month and there was a flurry of media interest again
this week when the White House announced she would visit U.S. President
Joe Biden in early June.
"I'm not applying for any job postings," she told reporters in
Copenhagen on Wednesday, playing down speculation that the visit might
amount to a job interview for the NATO role.
While the post traditionally goes to a European, any serious candidate
needs buy-in from Washington, NATO's dominant power.
A source familiar with U.S. thinking said the Biden administration does
not yet have a favoured candidate and a "lively debate" among top aides
was ongoing.
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NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg
attends the NATO foreign ministers' meeting at the Alliance's
headquarters in Brussels, Belgium April 4, 2023. REUTERS/Johanna
Geron
A State Department spokesperson said it was "too early in the
process to speculate on who the United States will support".
Social Democrat Frederiksen, 45, became Denmark's youngest prime
minister in 2019. She was praised for crisis management in the
COVID-19 pandemic and won a second term last year.
She would have to give up her post as prime minister if she got the
NATO job, which political commentators have said would bring her
fragile government to the brink of collapse.
And a campaign for the NATO post would not be plain sailing.
Her country falls well short of the NATO goal of spending 2% of GDP
on defence. Denmark is at 1.38%, although Frederiksen has pledged to
speed up efforts to hit the target.
Some allies also argue the job should go to an Eastern European for
the first time, particularly as Russia's war in Ukraine has made
that region even more important for NATO.
If Frederiksen got the job, she would be the third NATO boss in a
row from a Nordic country.
OTHER POSSIBILITIES
Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas, European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen of Germany and Canadian Deputy Prime Minister
Chrystia Freeland have also featured in discussions among diplomats
and media reports.
But diplomats say Kallas is seen as too hawkish on Russia for some
NATO members, Berlin wants von der Leyen to stay at the Commission,
and Freeland faces major headwinds as a non-European from a country
considered a laggard on defence spending.
Other names that often come up are veteran Dutch Prime Minister Mark
Rutte and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.
But Rutte has insisted he does not want the job. And Sanchez has a
general election to fight later this year.
Some diplomats also suspect many mooted candidates may be
unacceptable to Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who is widely
expected to be re-elected on Sunday and has shown no qualms about
blocking NATO consensus.
Turkey, along with Hungary, is holding up Swedish membership of
NATO.
The apparent shortage of candidates with widespread support raises
the possibility of Stoltenberg's tenure being extended again,
perhaps until another NATO summit in 2024.
Stoltenberg has said he is not seeking to stay longer. But he has
not said how he would respond if asked to do so.
(Reporting by Andrew Gray, Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen, Steve Holland,
Humeyra Pamuk, Clement Rossignol, John Irish and Michel Rose;
Writing by Andrew Gray; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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