SUPERPOWERS
Latvia's top diplomat stakes claim to be next NATO boss
Latvia's top diplomat stakes claim to be next NATO boss
by AFP Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Nov 29, 2023
Latvian Foreign Minister Krisjanis Karins told AFP Wednesday he was "ready" to succeed Jens Stoltenberg as head of NATO, urging members to look across the alliance for its next boss.

"If there's interest, I would be ready and I think I have experience and certain qualities and skills that I could bring to the table," Karins, a former prime minister of his country, said after a NATO meeting in Brussels.

He insisted he was not yet an "official candidate" being proposed by Latvia's government.

Stoltenberg -- who has had his tenure extended twice in the face of Russia's war on Ukraine -- is expected to leave when his current term ends next autumn.

Outgoing Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has put himself forward and is seen as a clear front-runner by diplomats with backing from heavyweights including France and Germany.

Karins said he "can only speak well" of Rutte -- who would become the fourth Dutchman to head the alliance -- after working with him on the European stage for years.

But the Baltic leader said NATO should look beyond the small group of core countries for a next boss and turn its eyes to newer members closer to the Russian threat in the east.

Another potential name in the running for the job is Prime Minister Kaja Kallas from Latvia's neighbour Estonia.

"What's important is that in this process, we look throughout the entire alliance at potential candidates," Karins said.

"It is no longer a small alliance fighting a Cold War. It is now a very broad alliance, 31 countries soon to be 32, which spans basically the entire continent."

Latvia's top diplomat -- who was born in US President Joe Biden's hometown of Wilmington, Delaware -- said it would send a "good signal" if the next NATO chief came from a country that reached the alliance's two-percent target on defence spending.

"For the believability of the secretary general, if that individual comes from a country which meets that there's no one can say: 'Well, wait a minute, your country's not doing it'."

Latvia's military spending this year reached 2.25 percent of gross domestic product and is set to hit 2.5 in 2025.

Rutte has not managed to get the Netherlands beyond the two-percent target during his 13 years in charge, but his government has pledged the country will reach it next year.

Related Links
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com

Tweet

SUPERPOWERS
Sweden says Turkey promised NATO approval 'within weeks'
Brussels (AFP) Nov 29, 2023
Sweden's foreign minister said Wednesday his Turkish counterpart had promised that Ankara would approve Stockholm's membership of NATO "within weeks". Turkey and Hungary are the only NATO members yet to ratify Sweden's bid, more than 18 months after it applied for membership. "I had a bilateral with my colleague the foreign minister of Turkey Hakan Fidan where he told me that he expected the ratification to take place within weeks," Sweden's Tobias Billstrom said at a NATO meeting in Brussels. ... read more

SUPERPOWERS
PAC-3 integrates with LTAMDS Radar

Lockheed Martin opens $16.5M Missile Defense Lab

Israeli army says intercepts cruise missile fired at south of country

US, S. Korea, Japan to share N. Korea missile warning data

SUPERPOWERS
Millennium Space Systems completes CDR for Missile Track Custody Space Vehicle

Lockheed Martin's Precision Strike Missile completes shortest-range flight test

US approves major long-range missile deal for Japan

Russia 'accumulating' missiles for winter strikes: Zelensky

SUPERPOWERS
US warship shoots down drone launched from Yemen

WhiteFox Defense Launches Scorpion 3: A New Portable Solution for Drone Threats

Spanish MoD signs contract with Airbus for acquisition of SIRTAP UAS

Airbus achieves milestone with Tablet-Controlled Autonomous Helicopter Flight

SUPERPOWERS
New antenna offers unprecedented flexibility for military applications

WVU Team Tackles Radio Interference in Astronomy with NSF Funding

Quantum Space launches Sentry to pioneer deep space communications network

Northrop Grumman completes CDR for SDA's Tranche 1 Tracking Layer

SUPERPOWERS
US approves new Ukraine aid despite Congress impasse

Germany says EU won't reach ammo target for Ukraine

Israeli artillerymen facing 'harder war' in Gaza

Report: U.S. service members population falls nearly 3% over past year

SUPERPOWERS
UN lifts arms embargo on Somali forces

Europe's defence sector seeks EU clarity, greater efficiency

EU defence spending to reach record 270bn euros in 2023

Swiss to export 25 battle tanks back to Germany

SUPERPOWERS
Russian pro-army symbols placed outside US embassy in Moscow

China hails 'old friend' Kissinger, architect of rapprochement

Latvia's top diplomat stakes claim to be next NATO boss

Impatient NATO allies push Turkey over Sweden delay

SUPERPOWERS