Cooperation Between China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia Threatens US Security: NATO Chief
‘Russia is delivering the latest technology into North Korea in return for North Korean help with the war against Ukraine,’ the NATO secretary-general said.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Nov. 7 said North Korea, China, and Iran are working together with Russia against Ukraine, posing threats to Europe and the United States.
In return for the military support, Rutte said Russia is likely to provide North Korea with its latest technological innovations, posing risks not only to the U.S. mainland and continental Europe but also to NATO partners in the Indo-Pacific, such as Japan and South Korea.
Rutte said North Korea’s actions illustrate the cooperation among Pyongyang, Moscow, Tehran, and Beijing, noting it would be a major topic of the European Political Community Summit in the Hungarian capital.
Rutte said he looks forward to working with Trump again. “We have to work together,” he said. “I look forward to sitting down with Donald Trump to discuss how we can face these threats collectively, what we need to do more.”
Trump Is ‘Absolutely Right’ on NATO Spending
The NATO chief said the European sides need to spend more on defense, calling Trump “absolutely right” on this point.
“He is right on this,“ Rutte said of Trump. ”You will not get there with the 2 percent.”
Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, more countries have increased their military spending, with 18 NATO nations spending at least 2 percent of GDP on defense, according to Celeste Wallander, assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs.
‘Dangerous Expansion of the Conflict’
Separately, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol held a telephone conference with Trump on Nov. 7. According to Seoul, their 12-minute conversation touched upon the presence of North Korean troops in Russia and the recent intercontinental ballistic missile launch by Pyongyang, among other issues.
Concerns were growing over the presence of North Korean troops in Russia. On Nov. 6, top diplomats of the Group of Seven democracies, as well as South Korea and New Zealand, condemned “in the strongest possible terms” the military cooperation between Pyongyang and Moscow.