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Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Wednesday a ten-year military spending plan to meet NATO's new 5 per cent defence spending benchmark.
A video released by the White House shows the US president arriving in the Netherlands and meeting other world leaders to ...
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte clarified his comment where he referred to President Trump as “daddy”, stating that he meant it in the sense that some European countries ask the US to… ...
To meet Trump’s demands, Rutte has drawn up a plan for allies to allocate 3.5 per cent of their GDP to core military spending and 1.5 per cent on areas such as cyber and infrastructure by 2035 ...
Mark Rutte, NATO Secretary-General: Defend ourselves against the Russians. We can defend ourselves now, but there is a big risk in three, five, seven years from now without the extra spending that ...
Hours after NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte praised Donald Trump by calling him “daddy” at the 2025 NATO summit, the president shared insight into their relationship: “I think he likes me.” ...
Mr Trump on June 24 posted a fawning message from Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte to his social media platform ahead of his arrival at the military alliance’s summit at The Hague.
This will be a moment of truth for Mark Rutte. The former Dutch prime minister is set to open, on Tuesday, June 24, his first summit as secretary-general of NATO, a post he has held since October ...
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte praised Donald Trump for his decisive action in Iran, claiming it was a significant achievement not seen in decades. The message started by congratulating Donald ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada and its NATO allies have agreed to substantially hike their defence spending target to five per cent of annual GDP by 2035.
"When it comes to Ukraine, in the short term, Ukraine cannot do without all the support it can get," NATO Secretary General ...
If world leaders were teaching a course on how to deal with U.S. President Donald Trump early in his second term, their lesson plan might go like this: Pile on the flattery. Don’t chase the policy ...