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Nato leaders agree to 5% defence spending goal in annual summit

Alliance to ‘reaffirm’ support for Ukraine, pledged ‘ironclad commitment to collective defence’ under Article 5

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Nato leaders to spend 5% of GDP on defence amid US pressure, Russia threat

Nato leaders to spend 5% of GDP on defence amid US pressure, Russia threat
Seong Hyeon Choiin The Hague
Nato member states have committed to boosting investments in defence to 5 per cent of their domestic output, largely endorsing US President Donald Trump’s pressure on Washington’s European allies.

The North Atlantic Council (NAC), which convened on Wednesday during the two-day Nato summit in The Hague, the member states’ leaders agreed to spend the higher percentage annually on core defence requirements and “defence-and-security-related” expenditures by 2035, in the face of “profound security threats and challenges”, including “long-term threats posed by Russia to Euro-Atlantic security”.

Nato heads of state said in The Hague Summit Declaration issued after the NAC that their investments would ensure that they have the “forces, capabilities, resources, infrastructure, war fighting readiness, and resilience” required for “deterrence and defence, crisis prevention and management, and cooperative security”.

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It said the allies agreed that the 5 per cent commitment would be comprised of at least 3.5 per cent of GDP annually on “core” defence expenditure and requirements within the next decade for meeting “Nato capability targets”, and up to 1.5 per cent to “protect critical infrastructure, defend our networks, ensure our civil preparedness and resilience, unleash innovation, and strengthen our defence industrial base”.

Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte and US President Donald Trump. Photo: Reuters
Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte and US President Donald Trump. Photo: Reuters

“We reaffirm our shared commitment to rapidly expand transatlantic defence industrial cooperation and to harness emerging technology and the spirit of innovation to advance our collective security,” the declaration said. “We will work to eliminate defence trade barriers among allies and will leverage our partnerships to promote defence industrial cooperation.”

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