THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) – NATO leaders are expected to agree this week that member countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense, except the new and much vaunted investment pledge will not apply to all of them.
NATO leaders are set to agree a historic defense spending pledge, but the hike won’t apply to all
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) – NATO leaders are expected to agree this week that member countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense, except the new and much vaunted investment pledge will not apply to all of them.
Spain has reached a deal with NATO to be excluded from the 5% of GDP spending target, while President Donald Trump said the figure shouldn’t apply to the United States, only its allies.
In announcing Spain’s decision Sunday, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the spending pledge language in NATO’s final summit communique – a one-page text of perhaps half a dozen paragraphs – would no longer refer to “all allies.”
It raises questions about what demands could be insisted on from other members of the alliance like Belgium, Canada, France and Italy that also would struggle to hike security spending by billions of dollars.