Caretaker Dutch Prime Minister looks to become the next NATO Secretary General

Prime Minister Mark Rutte is the top candidate to become the next NATO Secretary-General with sources within NATO saying that Rutte now has the backing of 28 of the 32 allied nations.

It’s not because of his competencies so why is he being selected?

When Rutte became Prime Minister of the Netherlands in 2010, it finalised the Dutch deep state power grab set up in the 1980s.  Since 2012 he has attended Bilderberg meetings every year except two.  He has also attended two Munich Security Conferences, in 2018 and 2024, and all but two of the World Economic Forum’s (“WEF’s”) annual meetings since 2013.

As Wikispooks summarises, during Rutte’s regime, the Dutch intensified their war on terror efforts in NATO, introduced big tech’s platformisation of social services and set up a corrupt national police force following the 2009 Queen’s Day Attack.

He has been nicknamed “Teflon Mark” for surviving numerous political scandals and cover-ups, often by arguing he has no memory of where or what he did.

The Netherlands was said to have deteriorated into a “narco-state” by The Guardian and Deutsche Welle during his reign.

In September 2021, Rutte fired Dutch Economic Affairs Minister Mona Keijzer after she suggested the country’s covid vaccine passport scheme was “illogical” and the Netherlands should “go back to the old normal.”

(Related: The Names of The Bilderbergers Who’ve Played a Role in The Covid Event)

In recent years, Rutte’s government has been attempting to destroy the Netherlands’ agriculture sector while at the same time making a deal with a foreign-owned company to open a factory in the country to produce 3D-printed “meat.”

(Related: New Factory in the Netherlands Will Produce 3D Printed Fake Meat to Replace Real Meat Produced by Farmers)

Following a new migrant crisis after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Rutte’s 4th coalition collapsed and on 7 July 2023, he announced his government’s resignation.  His government has since taken on a caretaker role pending the formation of a new cabinet.

When Rutte finally leaves the Dutch government, perhaps to become NATO’s “top international civil servant,” one of the disasters he will leave in his wake is a partnership he formed with the World Economic Forum – Food Innovation Hubs.

The clip below is Rutte speaking at WEF’s annual meeting in 2021 during a session titled ‘Transforming Food Systems and Land Use (Option 1)’. Rutte said:

“The role of businesses in the agrifood sector should be stimulated and enabled to create scalable solutions. And here, I’d like to highlight a World Economic Forum initiative in this regard – the World Economic Forum Food Innovation Hubs.  And these hubs in Africa, in Asia, in South America and Europe will allow businesses to connect regional stakeholders to scale innovations, because this is key, scale innovations that can address food systems challenges.

“And here, I am particularly proud to announce that the Netherlands will host the Global Coordinating Secretariat of the World Economic Forum Food Innovation Hubs, which will connect all other Food Innovation Hubs. And I believe this is important because it will be facilitating to create the partnerships we need.”

World Economic Forum: Mark Rutte | WEF Innovation Hubs, 27 January 2021 (1 min)

What Rutte is describing is four global food hubs centralised under the umbrella of the World Economic Forum, whose members are selected global corporations.  It is a global public-private partnership which aims to control the world’s food supply; from farm to fork.

(Related: Report details how a handful of Corporations are taking control of the World’s Food Supply)

The Food Innovation Hubs Global Initiative was launched by the World Economic Forum with its public, private and civil society partners.  It is the typical public-private partnership model that both WEF and the United Nations (“UN”) promote. Indeed, in June 2019, WEF and the UN signed a Strategic Partnership Framework to accelerate the implementation of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.  With the signing of this framework, WEF and the UN formalised the Global Public–Private Partnership.

(Related: 2019 open letter condemning WEF-UN strategic partnership and The Carlyle Group: An example of how the Global Public Private Partnership works)

According to its website, the Food Innovation Hubs Global Initiative “aims to accelerate the transformation of our food systems to be healthier, net-zero, water-positive, and more equitable” through mobilising and influencing a network of selected partners.

The initiative is supported by a Global Coordinating Secretariat (“GCS”) which is hosted by WEF and housed in Wageningen, The Netherlands. The Dutch government through the East Netherlands Development Agency (“Oost NL”) supports the GCS financially and by contributing to a small core team.

(Related: Invites to Davos Show Direct Collusion Between WEF and the Dutch Government and Documents prove the Dutch Government is colluding with the WEF to implement The Great Reset)

According to Oost NL, the first Food Innovation Hubs are being developed in Colombia, India, Europe, Viet Nam and Kenya.  WEF’s website lists an additional hub in the United Arab Emirates.

(Related: Bill Gates is “inspired” by digital ID and smart farming projects in India and Farmer Bill and his wife, the private owners of more farmland than anyone else in America)

As indicated on the Food Innovation Hubs’ website, the relevant section in WEF’s strategic intelligence is titled “Agritech.”

“Agritech,” WEF’s strategic intelligence says, “is a natural evolution of precision agriculture, realised through the automated analysis of data collected from the field via equipment sensors and other sources.”

“An emerging set of smart technologies, coupled with new digital skills and enhanced data control, can help foster more forward-looking decision-making and positively shape the future direction of the value chains connecting farmers to consumers. This new paradigm calls for a comprehensive evolution from traditional to digital systems, in order to reduce costs, increase efficient production, and inject greater environmental and social sustainability into agricultural activity.”

Replacing traditional farming with “digital systems” is the same that is being incrementally imposed on farmers and consumers in the UK.  In February 2020, the Agricultural Productivity Working Group published its report to the Food and Drink Sector Council.  According to Sandi Adams, the report describes how the authors want to revolutionise farming and farms into what they called “super farms” – huge agritech farms.  “Tech is the biggest thing, it’s agritech farming,” Adams said.

(Related: Sandi Adams: Farming is being destroyed and it’s being destroyed by design)

Below is a static image of WEF’s “Agritech” interactive graphic which gives an idea of the all-encompassing Food Innovation Hubs as envisioned by the Dutch government-WEF partnership.  You can click through and explore the graphic HERE.

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