NATO’s secretary general warns that coordinated aggression by Russia and China could trigger the most dangerous global security crisis since World War II.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte has issued stark warnings about a sharp escalation in global security risks stemming from potential coordinated actions by Russia and China. Speaking in late December, Rutte highlighted the possibility of simultaneous aggression—namely, a Chinese attack on Taiwan occurring alongside increased Russian pressure or intensified attacks in Europe.
According to Rutte, such a scenario would represent the most dangerous global security situation since World War II. He warned that it could force NATO into a multi-front crisis, stretching alliance resources across both Europe and the Indo-Pacific, and significantly increasing the risk of a much wider conflict. NATO planners, he noted, are increasingly factoring in this dual-theater threat as part of their strategic assessments.
Rutte stressed that coordinated moves by Moscow and Beijing would confront the alliance with simultaneous crises in Europe and the Indo-Pacific region. This, he cautioned, could rapidly evolve into a global security emergency—what he described as a potential “World War III” scenario if deterrence fails and escalation spirals out of control.