Massive security operation for NATO summit turns parts of The Hague into a fortress
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Locals, art lovers and diplomats like to meet over a meal and a drink in the historic Gastrobar Berlage behind a landmark art museum in The Hague.
But the usual stream of visitors turned into a trickle when fences started rising outside as part of super-tight security around a meeting of NATO leaders that is smothering the Dutch city in a massive military and police operation called Orange Shield.
Parts of the usually laid-back city, where NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte used to ride his bicycle to work while munching on an apple when he was prime minister of the Netherlands, are turning into a military fortress.
'It's dead,' Berlage owner Bianca Veenhof said as she looked at an almost empty terrace at the start of what should have been Wednesday's lunchtime rush.
Parking spots have been blocked off by freshly installed security fencing, workers in nearby offices have been told to stay home and public transit lines near the grounds have been diverted.
The city that markets itself as the global hub of peace and justice because of the international courts it hosts is turning into a city of security and inconvenience for the June 24-25 meeting that is scheduled to feature leaders of the 32-nation alliance, including U.S. President Trump.
The summit comes as global geopolitical tensions soar and conflict escalates in the Middle East.
In what they are calling the biggest security operation ever staged in the Netherlands, authorities are locking down parts of the city, closing off roads, and shutting down airspace.
Temporary barricades and metal mesh fences surrounding the World Forum summit venue are just a fraction of the measures that radiate out from The Hague.
Some 27,000 police officers — about half of the country's entire force — will be on duty around the summit along with more than 10,000 defense personnel.
Military police will protect delegations. Frigates will patrol the North Sea, F-35 fighter jets and Apache helicopters will take to the skies and air defense systems will be on alert. Bomb squads will comb the venue for explosives.
Convoys carrying leaders will be whisked with military police escorts along closed-off highways from airports to their accommodations. While civilian drones are banned from the airspace around the summit and other key locations, police and military drones will buzz around the skies over the summit venue and other locations where leaders gather.
Police and riot police also will be on hand for several protests that have already been announced, including an effort by demonstrators to shut down a major highway into the city.
Then there are the less visible but no less important measures being taken to provide cybersecurity. The country's top counterterrorism official declined to go into details.
The leaders are scheduled to have dinner with Dutch King Willem-Alexander at his palace in a forest in the city Tuesday night before a meeting the next day where they are expected to agree a new defense spending target.
While the leaders are dining with the Dutch royals, foreign and defense ministers from NATO nations will hold meetings at the summit venue to discuss issues including the war in Ukraine.
When the government heads meet Wednesday, they will seek agreement on ramping up military spending as Trump insists Europe must look after its own security, while Washington focuses on China and its own borders.
The summit venue is a conference center and theater close to the building that once housed the U.N. tribunal for the former Yugoslavia where Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, his military chief Ratko Mladic, and others were convicted of war crimes.
The venue also is close to the headquarters of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the European Union's law enforcement and judicial cooperation agencies.
Just down the road is the International Criminal Court, whose chief prosecutor and four judges have been slapped with sanctions by Trump. Closer still is the top United Nations court, the International Court of Justice, whose judges settle disputes between nations.
Many residents near the summit are not sticking around to watch the event unfold.
At the end of the week, Berlage will close its doors and sunny terrace for a week, only reopening when the NATO bandwagon has moved on.
Veenhof estimates the enforced closure and weeks of plummeting bookings will cost the bistro up to 150,000 euros ($173,000) in lost earnings.
Veenhof and her partner Bauke van Schaik, who is the chef at Berlage, have had enough of the summit already and are fleeing the city for the duration.
'Good friends of ours live in Portugal, so we going there for a few days,' she said. 'We'll be a bit further away from all the misery and frustration.'
Corder writes for the Associated Press.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Business Lookahead: Middle East tensions, Powell testimony
STORY: From the possibility of an oil supply shock to testimony from Fed boss Jerome Powell, these are the stories to watch in business and finance in the coming week. :: Possible oil supply shock :: June 15, 2025 The Israel-Iran war has investors bracing for a possible oil supply shock. :: Tehran, Iran Brent crude has topped $75 for the first time since January. :: File For now, there are no signs of disruption to output, but Iran produces around 3.3 million barrels a day and exports around half that, according to Reuters and LSEG calculations. A shortfall in Iranian barrels, while jarring to markets, could be offset by other OPEC countries tapping spare capacity to fill that void. :: NATO summit A NATO summit officially kicks off in the Netherlands on Wednesday. NATO boss Mark Rutte wants all allies to commit to U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed defense spending target of 5% of GDP. To do that, NATO will interpret defense more broadly. It would up the spending target on traditional defense to 3.5% and members would then need to spend at least 1.5% of GDP on military-releated infrastructure and protection against cyber attacks. :: Powell testimony Markets will look to Fed boss Jerome Powell when he testifies before Senate and House committees to elaborate on what his expectation for "meaningful" inflation means for the rate outlook. Powell could also be asked how a further Middle East escalation impacts inflation. Thursday's final read on first quarter GDP meanwhile should confirm that the economy shrank. :: Economic indicators Trump's reciprocal tariffs initially led to order front-loading, supporting global business activity, but that is fading fast with global recession creeping back up. With little forward guidance from companies, economic indicators are more vital than ever for markets, and a raft of them are due in the days to come. Monday brings the first release of June business activity for a host of economies including the euro area, Britain and the United States. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Boston Globe
34 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Pro-Palestinian activists break into UK's biggest air base in startling security breach
Advertisement In a statement, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the incident 'disgraceful,' saying: 'Our Armed Forces represent the very best of Britain and put their lives on the line for us every day. It is our responsibility to support those who defend us.' Palestine Action has carried out a series of acts of vandalism at high-profile and supposedly secure locations, including defense manufacturers. Thames Valley Police, the force responsible for the area, said in a statement that officers were working with the Ministry of Defense and the RAF to investigate. Inquiries 'are ongoing to locate and arrest those responsible,' the force noted. In a statement, the Ministry of Defense said, 'We strongly condemn this vandalism of Royal Air Force assets. We are working closely with the police who are investigating.' Advertisement The ministry did not immediately respond to a question on whether it would open a review of security at the site. Grant Shapps, a former British defense secretary, wrote on social media that there needed to be a 'full security review.' 'Storming an RAF base isn't protest — it's a national security breach,' he wrote. 'The blame lies squarely with these reckless activists, but ministers must now explain how on earth it was allowed to happen.' In its statement Friday, Palestine Action claimed the targeted planes 'can carry military cargo and are used to refuel' military aircraft, including fighter jets, from the British and Israeli militaries. But Greg Bagwell, a former senior RAF commander and a fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said the planes damaged by the group were incompatible with Israeli fighter aircraft and could not be used to refuel them. 'They couldn't have gotten a more wrong aircraft,' he said in an interview. 'They have targeted aircraft that are not the aircraft they think they are.' The Israeli air force flies American-built fighter planes such as the F-15, the F-16, and the F-35A, Bagwell said, all of which can only be fueled with a boom-style method that is not used by the planes that were damaged Friday. Palestine Action has previously conducted vandalism and protests at sites in Britain that are operated by Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems and at companies with links to that firm, and also at other defense companies. Several activists have been prosecuted over the protests, including five people who were imprisoned last year for causing about $1.3 million of damage to a weapons equipment factory in Glasgow, Scotland, in June 2022. Advertisement Britain's largest RAF base, Brize Norton houses about 5,800 service personnel, 300 civilian staff members, and 1,200 contractors. Bagwell said he believed many military bases around the world were vulnerable to the kind of intrusion the group made Friday. 'Airfields are large pieces of real estate that have miles of fence line,' he said. 'It's not an easy piece of territory to protect everywhere. Anybody with a wire cutter or ladders could be able to get in.' Adding more human protection or electronic monitoring along every part of a major military base like Brize Norton would be very expensive. But Bagwell said officials needed to take the risk seriously. He said the breach showed that it would not have been difficult for terrorists or agents of a foreign government to have done something more sinister at the base. 'It was exactly the sort of activity that the likes of Russia and Iran would like to promote,' he said. 'This time it was a protester, but next time it could be someone who was doing something on behalf of others.' This article originally appeared in


The Hill
41 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump leaves Washington weighing pending Iran plans
Evening Report is The Hill's p.m. newsletter. Sign up here or using the box below: Thank you for signing up! Subscribe to more newsletters here PRESIDENT TRUMP left Washington for his Bedminster, N.J., golf club for the weekend, as Israel and Iran traded strikes for an eighth day. Trump will attend a fundraiser on Friday night, with plans to receive intelligence briefings over the weekend in Bedminster. The president will depart for next week's NATO summit in the Netherlands on Monday, after saying he'll make a decision within the next two weeks about whether the U.S. will intervene in the Israel-Iran war. Trump said Friday if the U.S. does get involved, it would probably be limited to air strikes. 'I'm not going to talk about ground forces,' Trump told reporters. 'The last thing you want to do is ground force.' Officials from Europe and Iran huddled in Geneva on Friday in search of an off-ramp. Foreign ministers from Germany, France and the United Kingdom met with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, with the Europeans encouraging Iran to drop its nuclear ambitions. The Associated Press reports that the meeting provided hope of further talks, but no concrete breakthrough. Araghchi said Iran will not negotiate while it's under attack. 'In the current situation, as the Zionist regime's attacks continue, we are not seeking negotiations with anyone,' he said in an interview that aired Friday on Iranian state television. Trump said Friday he wouldn't call on Israel to stop its airstrikes because they're winning the war. 'I think it's very hard to make that request right now,' Trump said. 'If somebody is winning, it's a little bit harder to do than if somebody is losing, but we're ready, willing and able, and we've been speaking to Iran, and we'll see what happens. We'll see what happens.' French President Emmanuel Macron said diplomats would make a 'comprehensive, diplomatic and technical offer of negotiation,' arguing that Israel won't be able to accomplish its goal of dismantling Iran's nuclear program all by itself. 'No one can seriously believe that this threat can be met with (Israel's) current operations alone,' he said. 'Why? Because there are some plants that are highly protected and because today, no one knows exactly where's the uranium enriched to 60%. So we need to regain control on (Iran's nuclear) program through technical expertise and negotiation.' The U.S. is capable of dropping a 'bunker buster' bomb that penetrates the mountains where Iran's nuclear program is hidden, although Trump's two-week ultimatum is meant to buy time for a nuclear deal with Iran. Politically, Trump is torn between the anti-war MAGA faction and traditional Republicans, who are eager to intervene. Some Democrats, including Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), are eager to see the U.S. intervene to annihilate Iran's nuclear program. Others are heartened by Trump's restraint. 'The fact that we're not reading about a U.S. attack on Iran right now actually gives me a little bit of comfort,' Rep. Jim Himes (Conn.), the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said in an interview with Jim Acosta. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) said on CNN that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 'has always wanted to drag the United States into a war with Iran.' Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.) mocked Trump's two-week deadline. 'What a joke,' she posted on X. 'We're dealing w/ a reality show dictator who uses Truth Social to notify/terrify a city of 10M people to evacuate + then says the decision on war will be 'made within two weeks.'' 'I don't know how the US ever recovers from this blow to our credibility in the world,' she added. 💡Perspectives: • Washington Examiner: If the U.S. did attack, would it work? • Foreign Affairs: The right path to regime change in Iran. • Responsible Statecraft: Israel is luring the U.S. into a trap. • The Wall Street Journal: MAGA's misguided isolationists. • Fox News: Army celebration a startling split-screen for angry Dems. Read more: • Trump administration monitoring possible Iran-backed cells in U.S. • Satellite images reveal Trump's dilemma over Iran nuclear complex. • Russia warns of 'Chernobyl-style catastrophe'. • Will Israel's interceptors outlast Iran's missiles? • Spain rejects NATO's anticipated 5% defense spending proposal. CATCH UP QUICK NEWS THIS AFTERNOON President Trump's agenda bill hit rough waters late this week, with the Senate Parliamentarian ruling that key provisions must be stripped from the bill if Republicans hope to bypass a Democratic filibuster. Elizabeth MacDonough, the Senate parliamentarian, ruled that provisions in the bill run afoul of the Byrd Rule and must be taken out for the legislation to pass by a simple majority vote using the budget reconciliation process. Republicans do not expect to get any support from Democrats for Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' so it's up to the GOP to ensure the legislation adheres to Senate rules for the special procedural fast track. The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports that the offending provisions fall under the jurisdiction of the Senate committees on Banking, Environment and Public Works and Armed Services: • The bill would have placed a funding cap on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which would have cut $6.4 billion from the agency. • MacDonough ruled against language cutting $1.4 billion in costs by reducing the pay of Federal Reserve staff, cutting $293 million by reducing the Office of Financial Research funding, and cutting $771 million by eliminating the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. Sen. Jeff Merkley (Ore.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, said the provisions 'will need to be stripped from the bill' if Republicans hope to pass the legislation on their own. 'As much as Senate Republicans would prefer to throw out the rule book and advance their families lose and billionaires win agenda, there are rules that must be followed and Democrats are making sure those rules are enforced,' he said. Republicans have a 53-47 majority in the Senate. If the provisions remain in place, they'd have to muster 60 votes for passage. MEANWHILE… Senate fiscal hawks, including Sens. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), are demanding more spending cuts to reduce the deficit. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has already said he'll oppose the bill because of spending and the debt levels. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has a tough needle to thread, as he's been wooing Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who say spending cuts to Medicaid have gone too far. There's also the matter of how quickly to phase out Biden-era green energy tax credits, which is further dividing Republicans. Thune, who hopes to bring the bill to the floor for a vote next week, can only afford three GOP defections for the bill to pass. It's the same dynamic Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) faced in the House, where changes to satisfy one conservative faction created a rift with a different faction. Now, House Republicans from blue states are digging in, saying the Senate's changes to the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap are unacceptable. 'We're not accepting that,' Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.), a member of the SALT caucus, told The Hill on Thursday. 'That's the reality. Never gonna vote for that bill.' 💡Perspectives: • The Hill: Is the US in a debt-fueled national death spiral? • The Hill: How Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' stacks up against his 2017 tax bill. • The Atlantic: Democrats must confront their gerontocracy. • American Prospect: The scheme to scramble your nest egg. • Compact: The long, slow death of development. ON TAP Here's who's talking Sunday… NewsNation's 'The Hill Sunday': Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.). CNN's 'State of the Union': Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.). Fox's 'Fox News Sunday': Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Tim Kaine (D-Va.). CBS's 'Face the Nation': Kaine; Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.); Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter; retired Gen. Frank McKenzie. NBC's 'Meet the Press': Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.). MSNBC's 'The Weekend': Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.). IN OTHER NEWS Vice President Vance is traveling to Los Angeles on Friday to meet with the National Guard troops and U.S. Marines that President Trump deployed to quell protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. Vance will tour operations and mobile command centers, and give brief remarks to military officials and Marines, the White House said. The anti-ICE protests in Southern California, which were at times marred by looting, vandalism and clashes with police, have largely abated. Still, tempers are running hot between California's Democratic leadership and the Trump administration over Trump's move to deploy thousands of California National Guard troops to keep the peace. The president also dispatched hundreds of U.S. Marines. A federal appeals court ruled late Thursday that Trump could keep the National Guard deployed in Los Angeles, for now, after the move was challenged by Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) in court. 'We emphasize, however, that our decision addresses only the facts before us. And although we hold that the President likely has authority to federalize the National Guard, nothing in our decision addresses the nature of the activities in which the federalized National Guard may engage,' the appeals panel wrote in its 38-page decision. Trump celebrated the ruling on social media: 'The Judges obviously realized that Gavin Newscum is incompetent and ill prepared, but this is much bigger than Gavin, because all over the United States, if our Cities, and our people, need protection, we are the ones to give it to them should State and Local Police be unable, for whatever reason, to get the job done,' he posted on Truth Social. The Hill's Zach Schonfeld reports: 'Though the 9th Circuit's decision marks a victory for Trump in the legal battle, it may be short-lived. U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, who issued last week's decision invalidating the deployment, is set to hold a hearing Friday on whether to issue an indefinite injunction.' Separately, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) pushed back on claims made by the Los Angeles Dodgers that the baseball team had turned away ICE agents who had 'requested permission to access the parking lots.' ICE called the allegations 'false.' Rather, DHS said Customs and Border Protection (CBP) 'vehicles were in the stadium parking lot very briefly, unrelated to any operation or enforcement.' 'This had nothing to do with the Dodgers,' DHS said. Also on Friday, the Trump administration gave California a 60-day deadline to overhaul its sex education program or risk losing federal funding. ELSEWHERE… Rahm Emanuel, former President Obama's chief of staff, appears to be inching closer to running for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028. 'I have something I think I can offer,' Emanuel said on CNN. 'But I haven't made that decision.' Emanuel, who has fashioned himself as a blunt truth teller, has criticized Democrats for being 'weak and woke.' Democrats are seeking a new identity after their sweeping losses and the nation's rightward shift in 2024. Hillary Clinton's former campaign chief Patti Solis Doyle told Mark Halperin that the Democratic Party is 'leaderless,' 'message-less,' and 'agenda-less.' 'We don't have any alternative ideas to the president and the Republicans right now,' she said. 'So, you know, I'm concerned, to say the least.' Democratic strategist James Carville said Thursday that part of the party's problem was that they acted as if Trump's base of working class voters 'didn't exist.' A similar debate is happening among factions on the right about how the Republican Party has changed in the age of Trump. Former Vice President Pence warned in a new essay that the conservative movement is being threatened by a 'populist fervor' and the 'transformation into the anti-woke movement.' 'An existential identity crisis now grips the American right,' Pence wrote in the essay, which was co-authored by a founder of the Heritage Foundation conservative think tank. 'A political movement once united by a commitment to limited government, moral order, and a robust defense of American ideals now appears fractured, its purpose clouded by populist grievances and ideological drift.' 💡Perspectives: • The Liberal Patriot: How everyday Americans can create healthier politics. • Gideon's: An anti-mandate for NYC's next mayor? • Whole Hog Politics: Land of Lincoln? Not so much for Red America. • Wall Street Journal: Is rioting acceptable? If so, how much? • L.A. Times: How Trump could sabotage L.A.'s World Cup and Olympics. Read more: • 'Heartbroken' Minnesota lawmaker, wife share details of attack. • Judge rejects 'Duffy Directive' tying grants to immigration cooperation. • Man arrested after GOP congressman run off the road, threatened. • NYPD investigating car bomb threat against mayoral candidate Mamdani. • Man charged with attempted kidnapping of Memphis mayor. Thanks for reading! Stay up to date with News Alerts from The Hill here. See you next time.