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New Zealand rejects US ‘freeloader’ swipe over defence spending

Analysts say the US defence secretary’s taunts ring hollow given Washington’s own record of undermining alliance obligations

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Delegates watch US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth’s speech on a screen at the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore on Saturday. Photo: Reuters
Maria Siow
New Zealand’s defence minister was sitting in the front row at Singapore’s Shangri-La Dialogue when his US counterpart called his country a “freeloader”.

“If I’m being honest, 2 per cent is not enough,” Pete Hegseth declared from the stage on Saturday, referring to Wellington’s plan to double its defence spending as a percentage of gross domestic product. “So 2 per cent is freeloading.”

But analysts counter that this label ignores the Trump administration’s exploitative track record, from taking advantage of other countries, to undermining alliances and ignoring established international law.

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“Let’s be clear,” said Robert Patman, a professor of international relations at New Zealand’s University of Otago. “The Trump administration has not acted like a good ally of New Zealand.”

The Trump administration has not acted like a good ally of New Zealand
Robert Patman, international relations professor

“New Zealand’s military expenditure must support [its] national interests and not those of the Trump administration,” Patman added.

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