Willy Claes
Willem Werner Hubert "Willy" Claes (born 24 November 1938) is a Belgian politician affiliated with the Flemish Socialist Party who served as the eighth Secretary General of NATO from September 1994 to October 1995.[1][2] Born in Hasselt, he began his political career in local government, winning election to the Hasselt City Council in 1964 before entering the national parliament four years later.[1] Claes held several ministerial posts in Belgian governments, including Minister of Economic Affairs from 1988 and Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1992 to 1994, during which he advanced Belgium's integration into European structures.[1] His brief tenure as NATO Secretary General, the shortest in the alliance's history at just over 13 months, focused on adapting the organization to post-Cold War realities, including outreach to Eastern Europe amid the Bosnian War, but was abruptly ended by his resignation amid allegations of corruption tied to the Agusta Affair—a bribery scandal involving illicit payments by the Italian defense firm Agusta to secure Belgian helicopter contracts in the 1980s.[2][3] In 1998, Claes was convicted by a Belgian court of passive corruption for receiving bribes channeled through intermediaries during his time as economics minister, receiving a five-year suspended prison sentence, a fine, and a ten-year ban from public office; he maintained his innocence, attributing the case to political motivations, though appeals upheld the verdict.[3][4] The scandal highlighted systemic issues in Belgian political financing and defense procurement, contributing to broader investigations that implicated other socialist figures and eroded public trust in the establishment parties.[2]