NATO chief to visit Washington next week as Trump threatens exit from alliance


NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte gestures during a press conference to present his 2025 Annual Report, at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium March 26, 2026. REUTERS/Omar Havana

BRUSSELS/WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - NATO Secretary-General Mark ⁠Rutte will visit Washington next week for ‌what a spokesperson for the military alliance called a "long-planned visit" that comes after President Donald Trump blasted European allies over differences ​on the Iran war.

"I can confirm ⁠that the Secretary General ⁠will be in DC next week for a long-planned ⁠visit," ‌NATO spokesperson Allison Hart said. A White House official also confirmed the visit.

No further ⁠details of the trip were immediately available.

Trump said ​he was ‌consideringpulling the U.S. out of the Western military ⁠alliance due ​to the refusal of European members to send ships to unblock the Strait of Hormuz.

In remarks on Wednesday ⁠to allies gathered for an Easter ​lunch at the White House, Trump criticized France and the United Kingdom, among other U.S. allies, as a “paper ⁠tiger."

NATO, which includes European countries, the U.S. and Canada, was formed in 1949 with the aim of countering the risk of Soviet attack and has been ​the cornerstone of the West's security ⁠ever since.

“We've had some very bad allies in NATO,” ​Trump said. "Hopefully, we're never going ‌to need them. I don't ​think we will need them."

(Reporting by Andrew Gray and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by David Gregorio)

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