Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
- In full:
- Jakob Gijsbert de Hoop Scheffer
- Born:
- April 3, 1948, Amsterdam, Netherlands (age 76)
- Also Known As:
- Jakob Gijsbert de Hoop Scheffer
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer (born April 3, 1948, Amsterdam, Netherlands) is a Dutch politician who served as secretary-general (2004–09) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
De Hoop Scheffer graduated with a degree in law from Leiden University in 1974, having written his thesis on the U.S. military presence in Europe following World War II. He performed his obligatory military service with the Royal Netherlands Air Force from 1974 to 1976 and was discharged as a reserve officer. In addition to Dutch, he was fluent in English, French, and German, and he honed his diplomatic skills in the foreign service. From 1976 to 1978 he worked at the Dutch embassy in Accra, Ghana; he then served with the Netherlands’ permanent delegation to NATO in Brussels until 1980. Subsequently he headed the private offices of four successive Dutch ministers of foreign affairs until 1986.
In 1979 he joined the left-liberal Democrats 66 party but later left the group because it opposed cruise missile deployment in Europe. In June 1986 de Hoop Scheffer sought public office as a candidate for the right-of-centre Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) and was elected to the House of Representatives (Second Chamber) of the States General, the national legislature. He became the party’s spokesman on foreign policy as well as refugee policy and European justice matters.
Between 1997 and 2001 he was leader of the CDA during its time in opposition. A power struggle within the party in 2001 prompted his resignation as parliamentary leader. Following elections in May 2002, however, the CDA led a coalition government, and de Hoop Scheffer was named foreign minister by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende. He was reappointed to that position following elections in 2003. As foreign minister, de Hoop Scheffer supported the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 without contributing Dutch troops, a move that displayed solidarity with the United States but did not alienate France and Germany.
NATO, struggling to overcome a fractious membership divided over the Iraq War and the concurrent war in Afghanistan, chose de Hoop Scheffer, who was regarded by his peers as a pragmatist rather than an ideologue, to serve as its 11th secretary-general. Succeeding Great Britain’s George Robertson, de Hoop Scheffer began his term on January 1, 2004. He was the third Dutch person to lead the alliance.
During de Hoop Scheffer’s tenure as secretary-general, he pressed for more assistance from NATO’s European leaders in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the alliance assumed the lead security role in Afghanistan in October 2006. NATO also joined with the African Union to assist with peacekeeping missions in the Darfur region of Sudan and in Somalia. In January 2007 the North Atlantic Council, NATO’s principal decision-making body, extended de Hoop Scheffer’s term so that he could preside over the alliance’s 60th-anniversary celebrations in April 2009.