OSLO (AP) – Former NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said yesterday that he is returning to government in his native Norway as finance minister.
Stoltenberg led NATO from 2014, until he handed over to current Secretary-General Mark Rutte at the beginning of October.
Before taking over at NATO, Stoltenberg served as Norway’s prime minister from 2000 to 2001, and 2005 to 2013.
He is returning to government after Norway’s governing coalition split last week with the junior partner, the Centre Party, announcing its departure, in a dispute over European Union energy market regulations.
That left current Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, the leader of Stoltenberg’s center-left Labour Party, with several Cabinet posts to fill, among them that of outgoing Finance Minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum, the leader of the Centre Party.
Stoltenberg and Gahr Støre appeared together at an event in Oslo yesterday, where the prime minister was presenting his new team, but Gahr Støre didn’t explicitly mention Stoltenberg’s new job.
But in a statement released by the Munich Security Conference in Germany, which Stoltenberg was due to take over as chairman after its annual meeting later this month, Stoltenberg said he was “deeply honoured to have been asked to help my country at this critical stage.”
“Having carefully considered the current challenges we face, I have decided to accept Prime Minister Støre’s request to serve as his Minister of Finance,” he said.
