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)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Trump to tell wary public that Iran war goals have been accomplished in prime-time address
FBI arrives in Cuba to investigate deadly speedboat shootout
Luxon appoints Penk to lead New Zealand defence in Wellington reshuffle
Severe storm "Erminio" hits Greece, disrupting transport, daily life
Piraeus Port posts record-high revenue in 2025
1st LD Writethru: 13 killed after ammunition depot explosions in Burundi's Bujumbura province
U.S. stocks close higher
Urgent: 13 killed after ammunition depot explosion in Burundi's Bujumbura province
US lifts sanctions on Venezuela acting president, opening door for assets control
France bans oral nicotine products from April 1

Others Also Read