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Nato chief Rutte: ‘Keep on dreaming’ if you think Europe could defend itself without US – as it happened | World news

If you think Europe could defend itself, ‘keep on dreaming,’ Nato’s Rutte tells EU lawmakers

Rutte also tells EU lawmakers that if they think the EU or Europe as whole can defend itself without the US, they should “keep on dreaming”.

He says Europe’s defence spending would then have to go massively up to 10%, with further need to buy own nuclear capability and spend “billions and billions of euros.”

He also says Europe needs the US and similarly the US needs Nato.

He adds that even as US priorities evolve, there will “always be a very strong conventional US presence in Europe.”

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Key events

Closing summary

Jakub Krupa

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today!

  • Nato secretary general Mark Rutte told EU lawmakers that if they think that Europe can defend itself without the US, they should “keep on dreaming” (16:47), as he repeatedly defended the need for a close working relationship with the US president, Donald Trump, despite recent public clashes over Greenland and the role of Nato allies in Afghanistan.

  • In his first longer public outing since last week’s talks with Trump on the margins of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Rutte said there were two separate work streams looking at resolving tensions over Greenland (16:37), saying Nato would have a role in figuring out a way to strengthen the Arctic security.

  • Rutte also acknowledged there were “very sensitive” issues to be resolved around Russian demands regarding Ukraine’s territory, but he insisted only Kyiv could make these decisions on what, if anything, can be accepted as a compromise.

  • Nato chief also insisted that the US “greatly appreciates” all allied contributions to its “war on terror” in Afghanistan (16:42), despite Trump’s recent comments causing an uproar in Europe (10:51).

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Elsewhere,

  • Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the trilateral talks with US and Russia “covered a range of important issues,” but conceded that “complex political matters … remain unresolved,” hinting at further talks later this week (14:22) as the country struggles to deal with the impact of recent Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure (14:08, 15:18).

  • The 27 EU countries have given their final approval to fully ban Russian liquefied natural gas imports by 1 January 2027, and Russian pipeline gas by 30 September 2027 (10:36), despite Hungary and Slovakia’s fierce opposition to the move, with the former threatening with a legal action (14:32).

  • The European Commission has launched an investigation into Elon Musk’s X over manipulated sexually explicit images and possible child sexual abuse material spread by the platform’s AI Grok feature (12:05, 12:14, 12:47).

  • India and the European Union have reportedly concluded negotiations on a long-coveted trade deal, which could be announced as early as Tuesday (14:43).

  • Meanwhile, the European Parliament has put off until next week a decision on whether to resume its work on the European Union’s trade deal with the United States, Reuters reported.

And that’s all from me, Jakub Krupa, for today.

If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com.

I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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