
NATO chief says Trump has not ‘undercut' collective defense pledge
NATO chief Mark Rutte insisted Friday that US President Donald Trump has not undermined the alliance's Article Five collective defense pledge and said an American conventional presence would stay in Europe.
'Article Five, he has not undercut. He has committed to NATO, he has committed to Article Five,' Rutte told AFP in an interview.
Trump has rattled allies by threatening to only defend those he thinks are spending enough on defense as he pushes them to ramp up their military budgets.
His administration has also raised the prospect that it could look to shift forces away from Europe to focus on threats elsewhere like China.
'The agenda is not for the US to leave NATO or to leave Europe, the US is here. They will pivot more towards Asia, so that might, over time, mean that they have to rebalance,' Rutte said.
'But there is now and there will remain in Europe a nuclear and also a conventional presence of the United States.'
European countries have said that if Trump does plan to withdraw forces from the continent, he needs to coordinate with them to not leave gaps in the face of Russia.
'I assume and I expect that will be done in the spirit of no surprises,' Rutte said.
The NATO head defended his own refusal to criticise the volatile US leader, insisting he saw 'eye to eye' with Trump on efforts to bolster spending and bring the war in Ukraine to an end.
'When it comes to the issues I'm focused on, and that is Ukraine, that is NATO territory, we are really on one page,' he said.
Rutte was speaking after a meeting of ally foreign ministers where US Secretary of State Marco Rubio demanded they agree on a 'realistic path' to spending five percent of GDP on defense.
That figure appears well out of reach for most allies and is even considerably above what the United States currently spends.
Rutte said he would now launch a 'content-driven process' studying the military requirements needed as the alliance looks to come up with a new spending target for a summit in The Hague in June.
'I think you now need to get to a number, potentially, be it in hard billions or a percentage, but then also a pathway together,' he said.
China 'threat'
Washington has sparked fears in Europe that it could be looking to draw closer to NATO's number one nemesis Russia as it has reached out to Moscow to end the war in Ukraine.
Rutte insisted that Moscow remained the main threat for all NATO - and not just Europe.
'Yes, to the whole of the alliance, as we have agreed,' he said.
He said in addition that he viewed China as a 'threat,' a possibly controversial view inside the alliance which still refuses to label Beijing a direct menace.
'If you ask me, personally, I would say there's also a threat. I know NATO language is a bit more careful,' Rutte said.
'But China, with the immense investments they are making in the military, more navy ships than the US has, a thousand nuclear warheads... Yeah, it's really ramping up.'

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


Asharq Al-Awsat
an hour ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
US, Iran Agree to Hold 6th Round of Indirect Talks
US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Iran's recent posture in nuclear negotiations has grown 'much more aggressive,' just days before the sixth round of indirect talks is set to take place on Sunday in Muscat, Oman. While Trump said the next round of talks would take place on Thursday, a senior Iranian official and a US official said Thursday was unlikely. Iran and the US have already held five rounds of talks mediated by Oman. And while Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said Tehran and Washington will hold the newest round of talks in Muscat next Sunday, Iran's top negotiator, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, will be attending the annual Oslo Forum in Norway on Thursday, his office said. 'The US proposal is not acceptable to us. It was not the result of previous rounds of negotiations. We will present our own proposal to the other side via Oman after it is finalized. This proposal is reasonable, logical, and balanced,' Baghaei said. 'We must ensure before the lifting of sanctions that Iran will effectively benefit economically and that its banking and trade relations with other countries will return to normal,' he added. Trump said that the next round of talks could make it clear if a nuclear deal is possible to avoid military action. He told reporters at the White House on Monday that Iran appeared to have rejected a key element of an American proposal aimed at breaking the deadlock in the negotiations over the future of the country's nuclear program. 'They're just asking for things that you can't do,' Trump said at the end of an economic event with business and Wall Street leaders. 'They don't want to give up what they have to give up. You know what that is: They seek enrichment.' Trump also told reporters: 'We can't have enrichment. We want just the opposite, and so far, they're not there. I hate to say that, because the alternative is a very, very dire one.' At the same White House event, Trump said he had a telephone conversation on Monday evening with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. One day prior to his phone call with the Israeli PM, Trump and his entire top foreign policy team huddled in Camp David for hours on Sunday to discuss US strategy on the Iran nuclear crisis and the war in Gaza, two US officials and another source with knowledge told Axios. A senior US official told Axios the president sees both crises as intertwined and part of a broader regional reality he is trying to shape. Tehran has defended its right to enrich uranium as 'non-negotiable,' while Washington called any Iranian enrichment a 'red line.' Meanwhile, Washington's ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, told Bloomberg on Tuesday that Trump will not allow Iran to enrich uranium. Huckabee said 'there's nothing's off the table,' when asked whether military action was on the table if negotiations failed. On Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi reiterated criticism of a plan by European powers (France, Germany, the UK) and the US to adopt a resolution at the IAEA meeting that would accuse Tehran of non-compliance with nuclear obligations. 'Any ill-considered and destructive decision in the Board of Governors against Iran will be met with an appropriate response,' Araghchi said during a phone call with Japanese Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya. The Japanese Foreign Ministry then said Iwaya and Araghchi had a candid exchange of views on Iran's nuclear issue. 'Iwaya emphasized that Japan strongly hopes for a peaceful resolution of the issue and that Iran should not miss the opportunity for an agreement between the United States and Iran,' the Ministry statement said. In Tehran, Iranian lawmakers said in a statement on Tuesday that the United States and Israel are seeking to turn nuclear talks into a 'strategic trap' for Iran. 'The US is not serious in negotiations at all. It has set the goal of talks as imposing its demands and has adopted offensive positions that are diametrically opposed to Iranians' inalienable rights,' the statement from parliamentarians said. 'The only acceptable deal is one that permanently lifts all sanctions with the aim of achieving economic benefits for Iran,' lawmakers added in their statement.


Asharq Al-Awsat
an hour ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Five Nations and EU Urge Trump Not to Impose New Airplane Tariffs
Five nations and the European Union, as well as airlines and aerospace firms worldwide, urged the Trump administration not to impose new national security tariffs on imported commercial planes and parts, documents released on Tuesday showed. Airlines and planemakers have been lobbying President Donald Trump to restore the tariff-free regime under the 1979 Civil Aircraft Agreement that has yielded an annual trade surplus of $75 billion for the US industry. The documents made public by the US Commerce Department bared concerns over the fallout of possible new tariffs expressed by companies as well as nations such as Canada, China, Japan, Mexico and Switzerland, besides the European Union. "As reliable trading partners, the European Union and United States should strengthen their trade regarding aircraft and aircraft parts, rather than hinder it by imposing trade restrictions," the EU wrote. It would consider its options "to ensure a level playing field," it added. Trump has already imposed tariffs of 10% on nearly all airplane and parts imports. "No country or region should attempt to support the development of its domestic aircraft manufacturing industry by suppressing foreign competitors," the Chinese government wrote. Separately, US planemaker Boeing cited a recent trade deal unveiled in May with Britain that ensures tariff-free treatment for airplanes and parts. "The United States should ensure duty-free treatment for commercial aircraft and their parts in any negotiated trade agreement, similar to its efforts with the United Kingdom," Boeing told the Commerce Department in a filing. Mexico said in 2024 it exported $1.45 billion in aircraft parts, just a tenth of the total, to the United States. The EU said it took US exports of aircraft worth roughly $12 billion, while exporting about $8 billion of aircraft to the US. In early May, the Commerce Department launched a "Section 232" national security investigation into imports of commercial aircraft, jet engines and parts that could form the basis for even higher tariffs on such imports. Last week, Delta Air Lines and major trade groups warned of tariffs' impact on ticket prices, aviation safety and supply chains. "Current US tariffs on aviation are putting domestic production of commercial aircraft at risk," Airbus Americas CEO Robin Hayes said in a filing. "It is not realistic or sensible today to create a 100% domestic supply chain in any country." Boeing said it had been increasing US content in its airplanes over the last decade and its newest airplanes, the 737 MAX 10 and 777X, would have "more than 88% domestically-sourced content." The United Auto Workers union, which represents 10,000 aerospace workers, said it supports tariffs and domestic production quotas, adding that US aerospace employment has fallen to 510,000 in 2024 from 850,000 in 1990. "To safeguard the entire aerospace supply chain across the commercial and defense sectors, comprehensive tariffs and production quotas on several products are needed," it said. JetBlue Airways opposed new tariffs, however, saying, "Trade policy should reinforce, not destabilize, the proven systems that keep our aircraft flying safely and affordably."


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
US-Russian talks to take place in Moscow, Russian envoy says
Talks between the United States and Russia on resolving issues in their bilateral relations will move to Moscow from Istanbul, Russia's new ambassador to Washington told the state TASS news agency. 'The recovery of Russian-American relations is still a long way off,' Ambassador Alexander Darchiev told TASS, adding that the rapprochement with Moscow was being slowed by the so-called US 'deep state' and anti-Russian 'hawks' in Congress. 'I can confirm that the next negotiations of the delegations will take place in the very near future in Moscow,' Darchiev was quoted as saying. The war in Ukraine triggered the biggest confrontation between Moscow and the West since the depths of the Cold War. Senior diplomats in both Moscow and Washington told Reuters in 2024 that they could not recall relations ever being worse. The administration of US President Donald Trump casts the Ukraine conflict as a proxy war between the United States and Russia, and Trump has repeatedly warned of the risk of it escalating into a world war.