NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Trump, Europe and the future of NATO
Per the Atlantic Council's June 26 event recap, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte spoke with Atlantic Council President and CEO Frederick Kempe in Washington about Trump, Europe and NATO's future.
At a glance
- Rutte said European allies and Canada raised defense spending by $1.2 trillion over the past decade (Atlantic Council, June 26).
- He described NATO as entering a Europe-led “NATO 3.0” phase.
- He said the Ankara summit would focus on delivery of defense commitments and signalled readiness to defend against Moscow.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said European allies and Canada have increased defense spending by $1.2 trillion over the past decade, speaking with Atlantic Council President and CEO Frederick Kempe in Washington, per the council's June 26 event recap — a sum he termed "The Trump Trillion".
Rutte described NATO as entering a Europe-led "NATO 3.0" phase, in which global defense responsibilities are distributed so the United States can focus on multiple theaters including the Indo-Pacific, per the recap. He said the upcoming Ankara summit would be "about delivery" on defense commitments while signalling to Moscow that the alliance is ready to defend itself, and that he expects tens of billions of dollars of new contracts through a NATO Summit Defence Industry Forum. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will attend the summit, per the recap, with allies set to demonstrate enduring support.
Per the recap, Rutte said European allies and Canada expanded defense spending by 20 percent in 2025 — which he described as the maximum absorption capacity for annual growth — and credited President Trump's leadership for the shift, saying he was convinced NATO would not have made "such an astounding leap" without it. He recounted showing Trump statistics at the White House demonstrating that Europeans are stepping up, and acknowledged the president's disappointment over Operation Epic Fury in Iran while emphasizing European contributions, including US access to military bases for Iran missions. On Russia, Rutte said Vladimir Putin "is not afraid of commitments. He is afraid of implementing those commitments," adding, per the recap: "that is exactly what we are doing, Vladimir."
Background
Rutte, the Netherlands' longest-serving prime minister before taking over the alliance in October 2024, has made keeping the United States anchored in NATO — in part by publicly crediting Trump for European burden-shifting — the signature method of his tenure. At the Hague summit in 2025, allies committed to spending 5 percent of GDP on defense, a target that would have been unthinkable a decade earlier, when most members fell short of the previous 2 percent guideline set after Russia's 2014 seizure of Crimea.
The "NATO 3.0" framing extends a long-running reallocation debate: an alliance founded in 1949 around American security guarantees to Europe, now 32 members, adjusting to a United States that views China and the Indo-Pacific as its pacing challenge. Summit-linked defense-industry forums reflect the alliance's newer preoccupation with production capacity — munitions and equipment output — as the binding constraint on rearmament, a lesson drawn from the war in Ukraine.
What comes next
The Ankara summit is the stated test of delivery: watch for the volume of defense contracts announced through the industry forum against Rutte's "tens of billions" expectation, the concrete form of support extended to Ukraine with Zelenskyy present, and whether summit language on Russia matches the readiness-to-defend message Rutte says the alliance must send Moscow.
Key facts on file
- Rutte said European allies and Canada raised defense spending by $1.2 trillion over the past decade (Atlantic Council, June 26).
- He described NATO as entering a Europe-led “NATO 3.0” phase.
- He said the Ankara summit would focus on delivery of defense commitments and signalled readiness to defend against Moscow.

