Speaker 1 (00:00):
Secretary, great to sit down with you. Thank you so much. I want to ask you first of all about this piece of news that we saw that Russian President Vladimir Putin, is going to travel to North Korea for a two-day visit. And a Kremlin aide has been quoted as saying that the visit would include a partnership agreement which would need to include security issues. What do you make of this?
Jens Stoltenberg (00:19):
It demonstrates how Russia now is aligning more and more with authoritarian leaders, Iran, Beijing, but also with North Korea. And North Korea has delivered more than 1 million shells for artillery to Russia. North Korea is helping Russia to conduct a war of aggression against Ukraine. And in return, Russia is delivering technology for their missile and nuclear programs.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
Will there be a specific NATO response to whatever this agreement looks like?
Jens Stoltenberg (00:51):
Well, our response has been clear all the way that this just shows how dependent Russia now is on other authoritarian powers, but also how Russia is violating UN Security Council agreements on not supporting North Korea’s missile and nuclear programs. It shows that security is not regional. What happens in Ukraine, in Europe matters for Asia and what happens in Asia matters for Europe.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
On that, you spoke to The Telegraph over the weekend about NATO’s nuclear posture. I know that it hasn’t broadly changed, but you did say it’s important to “communicate the direct message that we of course are a nuclear alliance.” Is there a specific threat here that you were referring to that you believe NATO needs to counter?
Jens Stoltenberg (01:37):
Now this is a general message that NATO remains a nuclear alliance. That’s our ultimate deterrence. The purpose of NATO is not to fight the war. The purpose of NATO is to prevent the war, to ensure that any potential adversary knows that an attack on NATO will trigger a response from the whole alliance. And therefore we need also the ultimate security guarantees that the nuclear weapons provide.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Regardless of Kremlin, the spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said your words were “nothing else but an escalation.” What’s your response?
Jens Stoltenberg (02:07):
Well, this is nothing new. NATO has had a nuclear deterrent since we were founded and we are transparent about this. There are no changes. This is a-
Speaker 1 (02:20):
It’s not an escalation?
Jens Stoltenberg (02:21):
Not at all. It is Russia that is escalating by partly having a lot of dangerous nuclear rhetoric, but also by actually threatening to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. Nuclear weapons shall never be used in a nuclear war, should never be fought and can never be won. And that has to be fully understood in Moscow.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
I want to ask you about something you mentioned in your comments today. You said allies need to impose a cost on China unless its support for Russia stops. What do you think that cost should look like?
Jens Stoltenberg (02:55):
Well, that’s a bit too early to say, but the reality is that China is trying to get it both ways. China’s propping up the Russian war economy. They are sharing a lot of technologies, microelectronics, which are key for Russia to build missiles, weapons they use against Ukraine. But at the same time, China tries to maintain normal economic relationships with European and NATO allies.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
You think there should be sanctions perhaps?
Jens Stoltenberg (03:24):
At some stage we should consider some kind of economic cost if China doesn’t change their behavior because now China is the main supporter of Russia’s war effort, war aggression against Ukraine, the biggest war in Europe since the Second World War. And at the same time, they’re trying to have normal relationship with European allies and this cannot work in the long run.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
A quick follow up on that. Have you spoke to NATO member states about possible sanctions, what that cost could look like?
Jens Stoltenberg (03:53):
Well, this is an ongoing conversation among NATO allies on how to deal with the security consequences or the fact that China is propping up Russia’s war effort in Ukraine. It’s not for NATO to make decisions on sanctions as that’s for individual allies, the European and US. But of course, the discussion about what are the consequences for China if they continue to provide support, that’s something that goes on among NATO allies.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Another point of news from NATO. On Friday, NATO agreed to play a bigger role in coordinating weapons deliveries. And you said it would put “our support for Ukraine on a firmer footing for years to come.” Is this a direct response to concerns about a change in the White House after November?
Jens Stoltenberg (04:35):
Well, what we have seen is that NATO allies have provided unprecedented support Ukraine, but at the same time, this winter we saw serious delays and gaps in our support. And we need to do whatever we can to ensure that we prevent those kind of gaps in the future. Because we know that the stronger our support to Ukraine, the sooner the war can end because the quicker President Putin will understand that he cannot wait us out. And therefore, I hope that allies can agree a more long-term pledge supported to Ukraine and also to give NATO a stronger role in providing that support.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
But Donald Trump, the former president, doesn’t agree. And he said over the weekend that the scale of US support for Ukraine is too much. And he called President Zelenskyy the greatest salesman of all time. And he said, “He just left four days ago with $60 billion and he gets home and he announces that he needs another 60 billion. It never ends.” Do you have a response to that?
Jens Stoltenberg (05:32):
Well, I strongly believe that it will not be in the security interest of the United States if President Putin wins in Ukraine because that will send a message to him. But also to President Xi that when they violate a national law, when they invade another country, they get what they want. This is not only about Ukraine, it’s also about sending a message to President Xi that he shouldn’t use military force against Taiwan or in any way in the Asia-Pacific. Therefore, it is in the US security interest to ensure that Ukraine prevails. We have to remember that European allies are really matching what the US is doing. It’s not the US doing this alone. European allies are providing as much military support to Ukraine as to United States.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
You also said in your remarks today that NATO will continue to bring Ukraine closer to membership so when the time is right, it can join without delay. Is there any indication of when that time would be? Because Ukraine is interested obviously in joining the alliance as soon as possible.
Jens Stoltenberg (06:30):
I’m not able to say when that decision will be taken because to be invited to NATO, we need not the majority of NATO allies to agree, but we need all allies. We need consensus. But in the meantime, we are building a bridge. We are moving Ukraine closer to a membership, not least by providing them military support to ensure that they have the NATO standards, the NATO doctrines. And are more and more what we call interoperable with NATO so when the time is right, we can make Ukraine a member of the alliance straight away.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
Looking ahead to the summit that will be held here in Washington in July, what are you hoping will be reached at this summit?
Jens Stoltenberg (07:09):
That we are sending a very clear message to Moscow that we are supporting Ukraine for long haul and also that we agree a long-term pledge support, but also a stronger NATO role in providing the support because that will help to convince Moscow that they have to sit down and agree just a peaceful solution to this war that ensures that Ukraine can continue as a sovereign independent nation in Europe.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Moscow has given no indication it’s willing to sit down or even interested in that?
Jens Stoltenberg (07:44):
No, and that’s the problem because Moscow believes that if they just wait a year or two, then they will wait us out and then they will get what they want. We need to convey to them that they cannot wait us out. We had to convey a very long-term commitment. And by conveying a long-term commitment to Ukraine that can help to end this war soon. The paradox is the longer we can commit the stronger support to Ukraine, the sooner we can have an end to the war.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
Mr. Secretary, thank you so much for the conversation.
Jens Stoltenberg (08:11):
Thanks so much for having me.