NZ has a long-standing partnership of 25 years with NATO and has supported various NATO-led efforts, including in Afghanistan, between 2001-2021.
“NATO is a long-standing and like-minded partner for Aotearoa, New Zealand. It is valuable to join a session of this meeting in person, to express our ongoing condemnation of Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine one year on, and as NATO and New Zealand work to renew our formal partnership this year,” Mahuta said.
“It is important that we continue to engage with our close partners to address shared security challenges, many of which are global in nature with wide-ranging implications, including in the Pacific.
Australia and New Zealand Deepening Engagement with NATO
The trip comes just 13 days after NATO military officials visited Australia and New Zealand from March 20-24.“Russia’s war against Ukraine has shattered peace in Europe, and other global challenges are on the rise. We have a responsibility to preserve the rules-based international order. This order protects democracy and freedom and allows for prosperity to flourish. Therefore, NATO Allies will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes, and we are grateful to our Partners for doing the same,” Diella said.
“In an era of strategic competition, NATO must work even more closely with like-minded countries. We are determined to continue to deepen and strengthen our cooperation with our Indo-Pacific partners, for example, by having their Armed Forces take part in NATO exercises and activities, which improves our collective interoperability and ensures our forces can meet common challenges.”
New Zealand NATO Deepening Alliance A Natural Fit
The move by the Hipkins government to deepen ties with NATO has been applauded by international relations experts, with the University of Otago politics Professor Robert Patman telling Radio New Zealand that it was a “logical fit.”“We believe in a multilateral approach to security, and we have done for decades. NATO is the biggest multilateral security organisation in the world, largely consisting of democracies,” he said.
“The other thing here, of course, is that we have a huge stake in what is often described as the international rules-based system or rules-based order, and that’s under threat at the moment.”
Patman noted that it was important for New Zealand to have good security relations with its economic partners because the world was becoming smaller “with middle powers and small powers exercising more influence.”
“And that gives us an opportunity to shape the world in the direction we'd like to go. And that’s how I see the relationship with NATO,” he said.