BRUSSELS (AP) - Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said Friday that NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5% of gross domestic product on their defense budgets at a summit in the Netherlands next month.
Dutch leader says NATO’s chief insists allies should spend at least 3.5% of GDP on defense budgets
BRUSSELS (AP) - Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said Friday that NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5% of gross domestic product on their defense budgets at a summit in the Netherlands next month.
In 2023, as Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine entered its second year, NATO leaders agreed that all allies should spend at least 2% of GDP. They are expected to set a new goal at a meeting in The Hague on June 25.
President Donald Trump insists that U.S. allies should commit to spending at least 5%, but that would require investment at an unprecedented scale. Still, Trump has cast doubt over whether the United States would defend allies that spend too little.
Schoof told reporters that NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has written to the member nations to tell them that "he expects the NATO summit to aim for 3.5% hard military spending by 2032."