NATO's new chief makes Ukraine support a top priority and says he will
work with any US president
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[October 01, 2024]
By LORNE COOK
BRUSSELS (AP) — The new head of NATO vowed on Tuesday to help shore up
Western support for war-ravaged Ukraine and expressed confidence that he
can work with whoever is elected president of the United States, the
alliance's most powerful member, in November.
“There can be no lasting security in Europe without a strong,
independent Ukraine,” new NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said in his
first speech on taking office, and he affirmed a commitment made by the
organization’s leaders in 2008 that “Ukraine’s rightful place is in
NATO.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin's forces are making advances in eastern
Ukraine. Ukraine’s army has a shaky hold on part of the Kursk region in
Russia, which has provided a temporary morale boost, but as casualties
mount it remains outmanned and outgunned.
"The cost of supporting Ukraine is far, far lower than the cost we would
face if we allow Putin to get his way,” Rutte told reporters, a few
hours after his predecessor Jens Stoltenberg handed the reins to him,
along with a Viking gavel with which to chair future meetings.
But Ukraine’s NATO membership remains a distant prospect. Several member
countries, led by the U.S. and Germany, believe that Ukraine should not
join while it’s fighting a war. Rutte declined to speculate about what
must happen before it can stand among NATO's ranks.
Rutte did single out China, and particularly Beijing's support for
Putin. “China has become a decisive enabler of Russia’s war in Ukraine.
China cannot continue to fuel the largest conflict in Europe since the
Second World War without this impacting its interests and reputation,”
he said.
NATO's new top civilian official also underlined the importance of
keeping the trans-Atlantic bond between the United States, Canada and
Europe strong, with U.S. elections just a month away.
Surveys suggest the election will be a close race. It could see the
return of Donald Trump, whose bluster during his last term of office
about low defense spending among European allies and Canada undermined
the trust of NATO member countries.
It became an existential challenge, as smaller members feared that the
U.S. under Trump would renege on NATO’s security pledge that all
countries must come to the rescue of any ally in trouble, the foundation
stone the alliance is built on.
But Rutte said: “I know both candidates very well.” He praised Trump for
pushing NATO allies to spend more and for toughening their approach
toward China. He also hailed the “fantastic record” of Vice President
Kamala Harris and described her as “a highly respected leader.”
“I will be able to work with both. Whatever is the outcome of the
election,” Rutte said. When pressed about Trump's commitment to the
other allies, he deflected, saying only that both candidates “understand
that, in the end, the trans-Atlantic relationship is crucial, not just
for Europe.”
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The new NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte speaks during a press
conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, Tuesday, Oct.
1, 2024. (AP Photo/Harry Nakos)
Asked whether the Netherlands, which has only just reached NATO's
spending of 2% of gross domestic product on its defense budget, has
set a good example to other allies, Rutte shook his head and said
“No. We should have done this earlier.”
Earlier, Stoltenberg had welcomed Rutte to NATO headquarters in
Brussels for the change of leadership.
The two men, who first sat together at NATO's table 14 years ago as
the leaders of Norway and the Netherlands, greeted each other
warmly, before laying a wreath to fallen military personnel,
surrounded by the flags of the 32 member countries.
“Mark has the perfect background to become a great secretary
general," a visibly emotional Stoltenberg said as he ended a decade
in office.
"He has served as prime minister for 14 years and led four different
coalition governments, so therefore he knows how to make
compromises, create consensus, and these are skills which are very
much valued here at NATO,” Stoltenberg said.
Rutte said that he "cannot wait to get to work.” Among his other
priorities, he said, are to increase defense spending and strengthen
partnerships that the alliance has established with other countries
around the world, notably in Asia and the Middle East.
After hundreds of NATO staffers applauded the two men as they moved
inside to the great hall where North Atlantic Council meetings are
held at the level of ambassadors, ministers or leaders, Stoltenberg
helped his successor to get started by presenting him with a Viking
gavel to use when chairing meetings.
Stoltenberg, NATO’s 13th secretary-general, took over in 2014, the
year that “little green men” from Russia infiltrated Ukraine. Moscow
annexed the Crimean Peninsula, sparking a defense spending buildup
at the world’s biggest security alliance that gathered pace over his
term.
His tenure was surpassed only by Dutch diplomat Joseph Luns, who
spent 12 years in charge of NATO.
NATO secretaries-general run the HQ, drive the alliance's working
agenda and speak on behalf of the 32-nation organization with one
unifying voice. Continuity is usually the key word when they take up
office.
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