NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has gone full ‘Red Dawn’ – warning that China and Russia might orchestrate simultaneous invasions of Taiwan and Europe to destabilize the Western alliance.
“If Xi Jinping would attack Taiwan, he would first make sure that he makes a call to his very junior partner in all of this, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, residing in Moscow, and telling him, ‘Hey, I’m going to do this, and I need you to keep them busy in Europe by attacking NATO territory,’” Rutte claimed in a recent interview with The New York Times. “That is most likely the way this will progress, and to deter them, we need to do two things.”
To counter this perceived threat, Rutte advocated a comprehensive dual approach aimed at fortifying NATO’s resilience and expanding its strategic partnerships.
“One is that NATO, collectively, being so strong that the Russians will never do this,” he explained, emphasizing the need for a robust collective defense posture to dissuade any Russian adventurism. “And second, working together with the Indo-Pacific—something President [Donald] Trump is very much promoting, because we have this close interconnectedness, working together on defense industry, innovation between NATO and the Indo-Pacific.”
Rutte further heightened concerns by highlighting Russia’s rapid military rearmament, which he described as a pressing geopolitical challenge. “We have an enormous geopolitical challenge on our hands,” he told the Times. “And that is first of all Russia, which is reconstituting itself at a pace and a speed which is unparalleled in recent history.” The NATO chief claimed that Russia is “now producing three times as much ammunition in three months as the whole of NATO is doing in a year,” a statistic he attributed to Moscow’s deepening partnerships with North Korea, China, and Iran in sustaining its war against Ukraine.