stingray
Line Up and Wait
What it comes down to is your definition of "The plane moves".
If your view is that the airplane's movement is relative to the moving belt beneath the wheels, then the answer is "NO!".
If your view is that the airplane's movement is relative to the ground under the moving belt, then the answer is "Yes, if you can get enough thrust to overcome the backward pull of the moving belt and attain rotation speed (relative to the ground beneath the belt)."
And, as many have noted, it is relative wind that provides lift.
The question never says anything about wheels. The plane speed relative to the belt is the same speed relative to the ground. At liftoff the speed of the plane is 60 kts. North. The speed of the belt is 60 kts South.
thrust to overcome the backward pull of the moving belt What is it pulling on? The faster the belt goes the less it has to pull with. Thats why when your tires start to spin you let up to get them to grab again. The faster you make them go the less traction you get.
You can make up all kinds of things but the question was quite clear.
Dan