Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Togever Dup.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
The Ellen Prime Minister Chris Luxen is headed to the
US next week to attend the NATO Summit in Washington,
where he's going to meet with members of the US
administration in Congress, and then he's also going to head
over to San fran to promote business and investment. Tim
Grosser is the former New Zealand ambassador to the US
and is with US now.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Haye, Tim, good evening.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Do you reckon he's going to get to meet Biden.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Well, I'm sure he will shake his hand, but I
don't believe for a minute there will be enough time
for President Biden to have a separate bilateral given the
number of leaders that will be there from NATO country's
vastly more important than US. But I still think it's
a terrific thing that he's going there, and I can't
think of a more tense or important time. So I mean,
(00:42):
let me give you my overall perspective. I mean, the
rest of the visit is all I mean. I would
use the term boilerplate, but that's some negative. I don't
really mean that. The key issue is what is going
to be able to perceive amongst the other leaders of NATO,
given the confluence of the huge strategic threat from the
(01:02):
Ukrainian situation and the resurgence of Donald Trump's chances of
winning the presidency, if you give me two or three
minutes of elaborate on those things, So we start with
I'll try and keep this basic. You know, the NATO
existed after the war to protect European security. It's been
a fantastic political success. It was aimed at the then
(01:25):
Soviet Union and then that became Russia. And the core
commitment technically is called Article five. What it means is you,
formerly the Soviet Union or Russia attack any of our
members and it's an in tank on all of US,
and US includes most importantly the United States, doesn't include
New Zealand, by the way. So this kept the peace
(01:47):
in this ghastly faustian bargain, you know, attack US and
face nuclear armageddon for seventy five years. And then Putin
decided to invade first crime year into twenty fourteen. I
was stuck in Moscow at the time. The exact time
has happened, but that's another story. And then in twenty
twenty two, his tanks and his troops invade western Ukraine,
(02:12):
the most serious threat to European security for seventy five years. Now.
Ukraine is not a native member. They'd love to be,
they never will be. And the reality is that the
fantasy of you know, Boris Johnson, Lez Trust and co.
Of total defeat of Russia now two plus years on,
(02:33):
is now clear to everyone, even if nobody's worked out
a way to say it in public. And that's the
underlying issue. And then along comes Donald Trump's resurgence last week.
So go back to I think twenty sixteen, just after
I was appointed ambasador in Washington, Trump made a statement
(02:54):
that basically said Russia is no longer a threat. And
then he went a step further, I think, in either
twenty seventeen or twenty eighteen, by actually questioning whether the
United States would validate Article five, the mutual deterrence central
component of NATO. And I went to this. So he
(03:17):
went there, and there was shock and horror throughout Europe
when he basically left it ambiguous. And I went to
a catch up job, a massive elegant black tie dinner
for about six hundred people, and all the Western ambassadors
including me, were invited at an elegant hotel in Washington,
and you know, all the great and the good Stoltenberg,
(03:39):
the then Secretary General of NATO and all came up
to say, the support of the United States for Article
five and for the defense of Europe is unquestionable. And
Mike Pence, who's then still the Vice president and on
Donald Trump's stied, got up and said the same thing.
And there was dead silence because everybody is thinking. But
(04:00):
I'm thinking, it doesn't matter, mister Vice president, what you
think if your boss has just said this that can't
be repaired by a gloss over show like this black
tie dinner.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
And so is this the threat of Trump winning again?
Is that we go back into this particular the possibility
that that.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
My point exactly my point either and I think that
our Prime minister, I mean, you can receive as many
briefings as he likes from foreign policy experts people, you know,
like I was in the past, but he really has
to go and hear it amongst the leaders have to
make real decisions. And I mean, I don't know what
your take on the debate is. While there's a massive
(04:40):
cover up, that's what is very clear to me from
a series of brilliant analyses that I've read in the
last forty eight hours, and a few conversations I've had
with friends in the United States, still deeply inside the
political process. This has got to be played out, and
the chances of a second Trump presidency have increased by
(05:01):
some Nanctor, nobody can say quite what.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
I'm pleased that you say that, because that's quite obvious
to everybody, and I'm please somebody with your expertise and
your years and politics sees it as well. Tim. Thank you,
I appreciate it. Tim Gross, a former New Zealand ambassadors
to the US, just on what Tim was just saying
that Ukraine not joining NATO next week when NATO meets.
According to the Telegraph, Ukraine is going to be told
it is too corrupt to join NATO and so it's
(05:24):
not going to be able to For more from Hither
Duplessy Allen Drive.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Listen live to news talks.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
It'd be from four pm weekdays, or follow the podcast
on iHeartRadio.