Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NATO chief fears ties unraveling

But Stoltenber­g hopes alliance’s bond with U.S. will bear up

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — The bonds between Europe and North America are under strain and there’s no guarantee the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p will survive, the head of NATO warned Thursday.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g called for an effort to shore up the military alliance as the divisions widen between Europe and the United States over trade, climate change and the Iran nuclear deal.

“It is not written in stone that the trans-Atlantic bond will survive forever,” Stoltenber­g said during a speech in London. “But I believe we will preserve it.”

NATO has been shaken by President Donald Trump’s “America First” stance and mistrust of internatio­nal institutio­ns. Trump once called NATO obsolete and has repeatedly berated other members of the 29-nation alliance of failing to spend enough on defense.

Ahead of a NATO summit in July, Stoltenber­g said “we may have seen the weakening” of some bonds between North America and Europe. But he insisted that “maintainin­g the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p is in our strategic interests.”

Stoltenber­g said the world faced “the most unpredicta­ble security environmen­t in a generation” from terrorism, proliferat­ing weapons of mass destructio­n, cyberattac­ks and an assertive Russia.

“We must continue to protect our multilater­al institutio­ns like NATO, and we must continue to stand up for the internatio­nal rules-based order,” he said.

After meeting Prime Minister Theresa May at No. 10 Downing St., Stoltenber­g praised Britain, one of a minority of NATO countries to meet a target of spending 2 percent of GDP on defense.

He said that despite difference­s between the U.S. and Europe, NATO delivered “trans-Atlantic unity” every day.

“We have had difference­s before, and the lesson of history is that we overcome these difference­s every time,” Stoltenber­g said.

Some European officials worry the Trump administra­tion is cool on efforts to hold Russia to account for misdeeds including election meddling and the nerveagent poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal in England, which the U.K. blames on Moscow.

At a G-7 summit this month, Trump suggested that Russia should be readmitted to the group of industrial powers, from which it was expelled over its annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Some U.S. allies are concerned by reports that Trump plans to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin when the American leader travels to Europe for the NATO summit next month.

But Stoltenber­g said meeting Putin does not contradict NATO policies.

“We are in favor of dialogue with Russia,” he said. “We don’t want a new Cold War. We don’t want a new arms race. We don’t want to isolate Russia.”

 ?? AP/MATT DUNHAM ?? “Maintainin­g the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p is in our strategic interests,” Jens Stoltenber­g, the secretary general of NATO, said Thursday in London.
AP/MATT DUNHAM “Maintainin­g the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p is in our strategic interests,” Jens Stoltenber­g, the secretary general of NATO, said Thursday in London.

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