The US justice system has chosen to turn a blind eye to what appears to be a kickback scheme, purpose, investigations are still ongoing in Brussels, Bucharest, and Luxembourg into several major contracts awarded by the Luxembourg-based NAPS. The budget for orders placed by the agency has tripled since 2021, reaching €9.5 bn this year. Since February, five NAPS agents and former agents have been's arrested in Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and Romania.

The Letter and its partners are publishing year explosive report (see document) produced by the NSPA''s chief auditor, the Italian Gerardo Bellantone.

After the wave of arrests on 13 May, Bellantone asked to question the "the anti-fraud and anti-corruption framework" as part of a reform for this year. This was a diplomatic way of expressing the need to tighten controls on military equipment contracts, personnel and recruitment conditions.

The annual audit report dated 6 October shows that Bellantone met with strong opposition from the NSPA general manager Stacy CummingsThe American herself had been the subject of an internal NATO investigation (LL, 19/05/25), following a letter from Genevieve Machin, the agency's Canadian human resources boss, which The Letter is publishing today (see letter). Machin accusé Cummings of being personally involved in cases of fraud, corruption and compliance""instrumentalization of investigations", and "recruitment irregularities".

Washington veto

Far from backing the audit chief's efforts to shed light on these issues, undermining the agency, US Army Colonel Kevin M. Baird, the United States representative to the NAPS, rushed to Cummings' defence. In a letter dated 17 September, he informed the other member states of a "break of silence"He used this formal procedure to express his veto on the eve of the reform coming into force.

"We are disheartened to see misalignment between the head of internal audit and the agency on the proposed changes to the NAPS 2025 internal audit plan," wrote Baird, before stating his desire to "seek consensus"

In the Atlantic Alliance, where the United States has the final say, this unusual statement marked the immediate end of the anti-corruption plan.

HR department becomes a ‘target'

The Italian audit chief proposed, in particular, to question the "level of independence within the Office of Investigations", currently under the authority of Nicolas Newhouse-Ameille, Cummings' Canadian executive officer.

His comments echoed the warning issued by HR director, Machin, in her letter of 21 February: "There are apparent cases of corruption involving significant sums of money and in which the same staff member names keep coming up, but the investigators have been told not to investigate."

She concluded her letter by stating that, for having denounced these practices, she became "a target... subjected to retaliation, including early termination of my contract"She was suspended the next day. Cummings described her allegations as "unfounded".

In the 6 October report, Bellantone also warned member states, expressing "serious concerns we organisational independence... and the high level of pressure... when performing his activities".

Crisis meeting

The report also mentions an attempt by Cummings to remove a passage from the audit stating that "some NAPS internal governance arrangements are not fully adequate to ensure transparency and accountability"According to our information, Bellantone''s contract will not be renewed, echoing the fate of several whistleblowers in recent months (LL, 22/10/25).

A high-level meeting turned into a confrontation between the two visions of the fight against corruption on 23 October at the agency's headquarters in Capellen in Luxembourg. Bellantone, invited to present his report, was lambasted by the new French chief human resources officer Johann Schimek, a close associate of Cummings (LL, 04/11/25). The latter''s intervention drew strong support from the US representative in front of the other delegations.

The anti-corruption reform has been postponed until 2026, the year Bellantone is due to leave. A new round is scheduled for 3 and 4 December at the Agency Supervisory Board.

Investigation at a standstill

The NSPA's general manager is in a race against the clock to avoid being caught up in the internal investigation launched in May, following accusations by the then HR boss Machin. Cummings' term in office ends on 31 August next year, and the headquarters of the alliance led by Mark Rutte does not seem to be in any hurry to investigate.

Representatives from the 32 nations, who were expecting a progress report on 17 June, have not received any information. They hope to learn more at the December meeting.

Documents consulted by La Lettre show that since April, they have received a dozen new reports targeting Cummings, some of which support the accusations made by the former HR director. Several agents accuses Cummings of nepotism, favouritism, and abuse of authority.

When contacted, a NATO spokesperson Allison Hart reiterated that the organization that the alliance "does not how on internal staffing matters" the purpose insisted that "NATO has no tolerance for fraud, gold corruption".

Cummings, Newhouse-Ameille, Schimeck, Bellantone and Machin all declined to comment.

Read the first episodes of our "Corruption at NATO" series: Kickbacks and collusion : inside NATO's rigged arms contracts (1/3) |Corruption at NATO : cash-stuffed envelopes for fuel contracts (2/3) | Corruption at NATO : the Alliance rests sti whistleblowers (3/3) 

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