NATO chief says splits in alliance triggered by Trump are ‘serious’

Jens Stoltenberg warned that splits between America and European NATO members over trade is threatening the alliance

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said Wednesday he was battling to stop the increasingly bitter row between Europe and the US spilling over into the alliance, warning of ‘serious disagreements’ among member countries.

European countries are at loggerheads with Washington over punishing new US tariffs on steel and aluminium as well as President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate accord.

NATO defence ministers will meet in Brussels on Thursday to approve plans to beef up the alliance’s ability to mobilise forces quickly in the event of a crisis, as concern about the threat from Russia shows no sign of abating.

They will also sign off on two new command centres – one to protect Atlantic shipping lanes, based in Norfolk, Virginia, and another to coordinate troop movements around Europe, located in the southern German city of Ulm.

But the meeting, just five weeks out from a full summit of NATO leaders, looks set to be overshadowed by the spat between European countries and their longtime ally across the Atlantic.

‘There are now serious disagreements with NATO allies on serious issues,’ Stoltenberg told reporters, saying he was working hard to minimise the fallout.

‘As long as they’re not solved I have to be focused on how to reduce, limit the negative consequences for NATO.’

Stoltenberg, who held talks with Trump in Washington last month, insisted the ‘transatlantic bond’ remained strong and pointed to the way NATO survived major differences among members over the Iraq war in 2003 and the Suez crisis of 1956.

President Trump has angered allies in the EU by imposing steep trade tariffs on aluminium and steel, with the trading bloc vowing to retaliate

President Trump has angered allies in the EU by imposing steep trade tariffs on aluminium and steel, with the trading bloc vowing to retaliate

‘What we have seen again and again is that we have been able to unite around NATO’s core task, to protect and defend each other despite those differences,’ he said.

The US ambassador to NATO, Kay Bailey Hutchison, insisted ‘the strength of our alliance is not in jeopardy’.

The Suez crisis 

In 1956 Britain, France and Israel invaded Egypt in an attempt to regain control of the Suez Canal which had been nationalized by Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser.

While the invasion was a tactical success it led Egypt to close the canal to shipping, which drew the ire of the United States and Soviet Union.

Heavy political pressured from the US and USSR, including the threat by President Eisenhower to crash the British economy by selling off government bonds, eventually led the invaders to withdraw. 

‘We are strong together, we will have disagreements on other issues but we will not have disagreement about the strength of NATO and the importance of deterrence and defence for NATO and for North America,’ she told reporters.

The leaders of all 29 NATO members will meet in Brussels for the summit in July when all eyes will be on Trump, who has repeatedly attacked European countries for not pulling their weight in the alliance.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has suffered the worst of Trump’s wrath for its failure to live up to a pledge by all NATO countries to try to spend at least two percent of gross domestic product on defence.

NATO is modernising its command structure and beefing up its defences in response to growing fears about Russia, following Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Thousands of NATO troops are already stationed on standby in the Baltic states and Poland as deterrent and on Thursday defence ministers will give the go-ahead to a new US initiative called ’30-30-30-30′ or ‘four 30s’.

Under the plan, by 2020 NATO will have 30 batallions, 30 air squadrons and 30 warships ready to be used within 30 days to back up existing rapid response forces.

‘This is about establishing a culture of readiness and we need that because we have a more unpredictable security environment, we have to be prepared for the unforeseen,’ Stoltenberg said. 



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