
Rutte aims to steer NATO summit around Trump turbulence
THE HAGUE, June 23 (Reuters) - Dutch politician Mark Rutte, appointed to navigate NATO's tricky relationship with Donald Trump, looks set to nail his first summit as secretary general after securing a draft agreement on boosting European defense spending as the U.S. president wants.
Rutte has a name for negotiating political and financial minefields, and seemed unfazed last Friday when Spain at the last minute appeared to call into question its commitment to the spending goal of 5% of GDP that members are expected to accept in The Hague.
But even as tension over military budgets eased, new uncertainties arose as the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear sites loomed over Rutte's carefully stage-managed summit plans.
The 58-year-old is not only a tireless communicator and an analytical problem solver but also a prodigious builder of friendships, said Ron Fresen, who covered his record 13 years as Dutch prime minister for the public broadcaster NOS.
If the potentially awkward summit in Rutte's hometown of The Hague is a success, "it will largely be down to his political dexterity", said Fresen, author of the book "The Rutte Mystery".
Rutte announced his interest in the top NATO job in a local Den Haag FM radio interview with Fresen in 2023.
"He later told me he had made a mistake and hadn't intended to announce his candidacy," Fresen said, "to which I replied: 'You don't make mistakes like that'."
Rutte's first months at NATO have mostly been spent dealing with Trump rather than external adversaries, to the frustration of some members, said Sten Rynning, director of the Danish Institute of Advanced Study and author of "NATO: From Cold War to Ukraine, A History of the World's Most Powerful Alliance".
The challenges have included Trump's threat to take Greenland from NATO ally Denmark, his suggestion that Canada become a U.S. state, his reduction in support for Ukraine and his scolding of its president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in the Oval Office.
Rutte has orchestrated the summit schedule to avoid further friction between Trump and European leaders over how to deal with Russia over its full-scale invasion of Ukraine since 2022.
"Most, let's say all, allies - except the United States - see Russia as a real threat and the driver of NATO defence. But not Trump. He sees it as an opportunity, and that gap has grown tremendously wide," Rynning said.
Instead of dealing with Russia, China and Iran, he said the summit had been set up to be a success "in the sense that they can announce that the alliance is united, that it is in agreement on defence spending".
Rutte is close to Zelenskiy and has unreservedly supported Ukraine. But he is walking a tightrope when it comes to NATO's role. Zelenskiy was not invited to the main event, avoiding a possible run-in with Trump, but only to a pre-summit dinner.
Yet disagreement over Russia, set aside for now, could ultimately become Rutte's greatest challenge, Rynning added.
For Rutte "this is not the time to cause it to fragment the alliance", he said, but in the long term "it is going to be his leadership challenge".
For now, Rutte has merely sought to reassure Trump that Europe is ready to take on more responsibility for its own defence.
"This summit is about the Euro-Atlantic area, making sure that we can defend ourselves against the Russians -- the really fast-reconstituting Russians," he told reporters on Monday.
"That we are able to defend ourselves against China, which is also rapidly building up its capabilities, including 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030. So we really need to spend more, produce more, keep Ukraine strong."
During four terms as prime minister, Rutte steered the Netherlands through the pandemic, forged coalition governments that bridged differences over asylum policy, mediated during the European debt crisis and took a tough stance against Putin after Russian-backed separatists killed nearly 200 Dutch nationals by shooting down an airliner over eastern Ukraine.
The former Unilever manager often arrived at government offices by bike, with an apple in hand, or in his unwashed Saab, living in a modest apartment in The Hague where he kept up weekly high school teaching while heading the cabinet.
Unmarried and with no children, he keeps both his private life and his emotions out of the media spotlight.
Generally well-humoured, he did once lose his cool with Fresen, who had sent a camera crew to cover a possible news event that turned out to be Rutte having a drink with friends.
"He called me in a rage and told me that if the footage was aired, he'd never talk to me again," Fresen said. But a few minutes later, Rutte called back to apologise.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
34 minutes ago
- Reuters
Right Canada-US deal possible but nothing assured, Carney says
OTTAWA, June 23 (Reuters) - Canada and the United States have a chance to strike a new economic and defense relationship but nothing is assured, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Monday. Last Monday, Carney said he had agreed with U.S. President Donald Trump that their two nations should try to wrap up talks on a new deal within 30 days. "We're working hard to get a deal, but we'll only accept the right deal with the United States. The right deal is possible, but nothing's assured," he told a televised news conference in Brussels after talks with senior European Union officials.


The Independent
40 minutes ago
- The Independent
Watch: Eyewitness captures possible missiles in Qatar skies on video
Eyewitness footage captured possible missiles in Qatar 's skies after the country's airspace was closed on Monday, 23 June. Iran launched missile strikes on a US base in the country after it vowed to retaliate against Washington for bombing its nuclear facilities on Sunday. Iran informed the US via two diplomatic channels hours ahead of the attacks in Qatar, a senior regional source told Reuters. It comes after American officials said Donald Trump was 'simply raising a question' after the US president entertained the idea of a regime change in Tehran following his claim he had taken a nuclear bomb 'right out of Iran's hands'.


BBC News
40 minutes ago
- BBC News
What does the new Industial Strategy mean for Scotland?
Nearly a year since winning an election landslide, and struggling to respond to public impatience for change, some of the Labour government's key policies have been published this key one was the Spending Review for the next three years of day-to-day expenditure and four years of capital with that, and dependent on it, are reviews of defence and infrastructure, the latter having not much to do with Industrial Strategy is the latest, and it does affect Scotland, perhaps quite significantly. So what is it all about, and what could that effect be?The idea of an industrial strategy is for government to support industries of strategic importance, which it needs to retain, such as defence, and those that offer the best hopes for growth and jobs. Let's leave aside the history of governments trying to intervene in the market and support British industry. It's not an impressive saga - due to backing the wrong options, supporting declining industries at great cost, or failing to do enough for those showing most promise. And in doing so, there hasn't been much of a consistent future, according to the new industrial strategy, is about championing eight sectors - for support, reducing some costs (primarily energy), boosting trade, optimising the market, getting obstacles out the way, and getting enough recruits in place with the necessary in government jargon as the IS-8, these include clean energy (that means renewables and nuclear), advanced manufacturing, digital and technology, defence, life sciences, the creative sector, financial services and professional and business economy has an interest in energy-intensive industries seeing their bills cut by quarter - around 7,000 firms making, for instance, steel, chemicals, cars, glass, ceramics and cement. But it's not the main outcome for Scotland could be in the sweet spot for other elements of this strategy across all the sectors targeted for support, if all the published strategy's intentions get followed up, and if UK and Scottish governments can collaborate on joined-up policy. There's defence, including naval shipbuilding on the Clyde and Forth and missiles and radar in and around Edinburgh. Clydeside has a world-leading role in making small satellites. There's finance, in which Edinburgh and Glasgow jointly represent an important cluster for remains a lot of petro-chemicals going on at creative industries include Dundee's gaming and Edinburgh's universities around Scotland punch above their weight, notably on life sciences, spinning out digital and technology firms, and playing a big part in attracting international strategy brings a reminder of a Spending Review commitment to reinstate £750m of funds for a super-computer in Edinburgh. Clean energy Clean energy is the one worth watching most closely. It has the potential to transform much of the Scottish economy as well as the view out to sea and across the landscape where more pylons will requires co-operation from the Scottish government on faster planning, on which there's already some agreement, and the new strategy aims at an accelerated route to grid connections for growth the north of Scotland is set to produce much of the wind resource, there is an incentive to locate the most energy-intensive industries close to that resource, thus reducing the need for all those part of that is set to be the Acorn project of carbon capture and storage, centred on centres could be a feature, as well as making hydrogen energy from Scotland's abundant wind power and fresh may be strategic sites chosen, most likely by competition, to get government backing for clearance and pre-emptive grid links. Co-ordinating policy between Holyrood and Westminster is more likely to founder on nuclear energy, at least so long as the SNP runs the show in has opposed new nuclear power for decades, which hasn't been much of an issue while Torness and Hunterston have generated through their changing. The move to smaller, modular nuclear reactors could be part of the energy mix in Scotland, which is why the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, chose the Industrial Strategy launch day to visit Torness power station in East Lothian and point to the jobs and investment that could come from the Scottish government embracing a new generation of nuclear a point of difference between Labour and the SNP, and enthuses industrial trade unions. But the SNP can point to the relatively high cost of nuclear power and to its very long legacy of radioactive SNP government also has a party policy of urging defence industries to diversify to more peaceful products. Labour has also taken aim at that, in an era of fast-increasing defence spend and opportunity to see that grow the Spending Review promised six munitions factories, always available to back up Britain's defence needs. Scotland could hope to secure one of them, but that might require a change of heart in Holyrood, to embrace the business of making UK industrial strategy calls for Scotland to have a growth fund for defence. You can probably see how all this might play into next year's Holyrood ought to be easier progress to made through collaboration on skills, mostly devolved to Holyrood but with signs that Westminster wants to do more on Holyrood's turf. Oil and gas skills On training, the strategy has been met with warnings from the oil and gas sector, including its training body are pointing to the gap between declining jobs for those with oil and gas skills and the rise in employment for those in renewable energy. That strategy requires joined-up government as well. And with Whitehall's hostility to further oil and gas drilling, the energy lobby argues that it doesn't look very also a big decision yet to come with big implications for investment in offshore wind due "shortly" from the UK government - whether to change the single GB market for power to one with zonal prices. That could cut prices in Scotland, but at the expense of hostile responses have come from those sectors that don't gain from this strategy. If government picks winners and priority sectors, it relegates others or it makes of the strongest criticism is from hospitality, with its trade body saying today that this shows the government once again failing to realise the damage being done to the industry, following rampant price inflation, higher payroll tax and a higher minimum the Scottish government comes the response that parts of this were already in the innovation strategy set out more than three years ago by Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes. She is concerned that energy price cuts for industry won't happen for two less welcome parts will require Holyrood ministers to have a closer look at the detail and the implications - economic and political.