News

In his keynote pre-Summit address, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will set out how NATO will become a stronger, fairer and more lethal Alliance. During his speech and conversation with the audience ...
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said Russia makes in 3 months what NATO produces in a year. He called for a "quantum leap" in how Europe defends itself. NATO is seeking to boost weapons ...
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte is axing jobs inside the world’s most powerful military alliance as part of a major restructuring effort. Rutte, who took over as NATO chief last October, plans to ...
China's embassy in the UK rejected NATO's claims regarding its military expansion, calling them baseless. The remarks followed NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte's statements about China's military ...
The NATO boss today warned that Britons should start learning Russian if the UK doesn't ramp up defence spending. Mark Rutte issued the chilling message while in London for talks with PM Sir Keir ...
Mark Rutte gave a keynote speech at Chatham House on Monday (9 June), where he proposed a target of 3.5% of economic output on military spending and another 1.5% on “defence-related expenditure”.
Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte has warned countries must ramp up defence spending or “learn to speak Russian ” as he gave a speech in London. Mr Rutte said the UK 's goals to spend 2.5% on ...
Mark Rutte has urged NATO members on Monday to increase air and missile defences by 400%, warning of a possible Russian attack within five years, advocating for higher military spending targets.
NATO allies must commit to spending 5% of GDP on defence, as Russian threat looms, says NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. Within three months, Russia develops four times the amount of ammunition ...
OTTAWA, ON, June 6, 2025 /CNW/ - Today, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, spoke with the Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Mark Rutte. The leaders discussed the ...
Mr Rutte will argue in a speech at London’s Chatham House think-tank that for Nato to maintain credible deterrence and defence, it needs “a 400 per cent increase in air and missile defence”.