Analyse
Stoltenberg’s claim aligns with **Norway’s 2016 defense white paper** (prop. 100 S), which explicitly ties security to democratic governance and rule of law, and with **NATO’s 2010 Strategic Concept**, which frames these values as essential to Alliance cohesion. His phrasing mirrors prior statements (e.g., 2014 Munich Security Conference) where he linked internal democratic resilience to external security threats like hybrid warfare. No credible evidence contradicts the assertion that these principles were central to Norwegian/NATO policy at the time.
Achtergrond
As Norway’s PM (2000–2001, 2005–2013) and NATO Secretary General (2014–present), Stoltenberg consistently framed security through a **‘values-based’ lens**, particularly after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea heightened focus on democratic backsliding as a security risk. The 2016 address occurred amid debates over Norway’s **expanded defense budget** and NATO’s deterrence posture, both justified partly as defenses of liberal democratic norms.
Samenvatting verdict
Jens Stoltenberg’s 2016 statement accurately reflects Norway’s and NATO’s long-standing policy priorities, emphasizing democratic values as core to collective security, as documented in official speeches, NATO’s strategic framework, and Norwegian government positions.