NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has said he had a conversation with a dog during his latest trip to Kiev, as he argued for continued military aid for Ukraine. He made the remarks during a joint panel with Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday.
Rutte visited the Ukrainian capital in early February, where he vowed that Western nations would continue their support, potentially including deploying troops to Ukraine – which Moscow has called unacceptable.
On Saturday, he recalled his visit, including a meeting with a bomb-sniffing dog named Patron – whose name means ‘bullet cartridge’ in Ukrainian.
The Jack Russell Terrier from Ukraine’s State Emergency Service has been turned into a sort of mascot by Kiev amid the conflict with Russia, and was featured in a cartoon series on YouTube – which turned out to be financed through USAID grant programs and was canceled after US President Donald Trump shut down the organization.
“I even looked the dog in the eye, and he told me, ‘we will never give in,’” Rutte said as he argued for more support for Kiev. He went on to say the conflict has cost Russia many lives, urging Kiev’s Western backers to “make sure” Ukraine has “the offensive stuff they need… to hit whatever they need to hit in Russia.”
Last year, Rutte raised eyebrows when he called Trump “daddy” at the NATO summit in The Hague – as have his fawning personal messages to the US president published by Trump himself on a number of occasions.
Last month, French MEP Nathalie Loiseau called him “McDonald’s employee of the month” after he assured Trump of his commitment to finding a “way forward” on the US president’s ambition to acquire Greenland.