NATO argues on raising defence spending target

NATO argues on raising defence spending target. Moscow’s nearly year-long all-out invasion of its neighbour has seen a string of European allies commit to spending billions more on their armed forces. Some at the US-led Western military alliance are now pushing to enshrine the increases by using an upcoming summit in Vilnius in July to raise NATO’s current target of two percent of GDP.

NATO members relaunched debate Wednesday on the thorny issue of ramping up national defence spending targets after Russia’s war on Ukraine upended security. Most NATO members appear to agree that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aggression means that two percent should become a “floor, not a ceiling” for national spending.

“I believe that simply wanting to approach the two percent target will not be enough. It must be the basis for everything else,” German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius told a meeting of NATO counterparts in Brussels on Wednesday.

But some nations are reluctant to make the target too ambitious or the commitment too concrete. “The two percent is okay, but we must also guarantee that we have some flexibility because the countries are different,” said Luxembourg’s Defence Minister Francois Bausch.

The alliance set the two-percent guideline around 16 years ago, but the 2007-2008 economic crisis saw many cut budgets. Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in 2014 led allies to promise to halt years of decline and “move towards” two percent by 2024.

Across the alliance spending has increased, but despite pressure from the United States for European members to spend more, as of last year only nine of the 30 allies were estimated to have made the grade.

– ‘Increasers’ vs ‘deniers’ –
A senior US official said the alliance was split into several camps. At one end were the “increasers”, such as the Baltic states and Poland, closer in proximity to Russia and pushing for a more ambitious level such as 2.5 percent.

At the other were the “deniers”, such as Canada, Italy, Luxembourg and Spain, which argue they are too small or that contributions such as overseas operations should be taken into account.

The official said the United States did not have a specific new figure in mind, but there was a lot to do as NATO pushes to restructure its forces, replenish depleted weapons stockpiles and modernise equipment.

“Taken together, I think the obvious conclusion is two percent is not enough,” the official said.

NATO command

“I’d say that’s where the majority of the allies are.” Washington is by far the biggest military spender, representing approximately two-thirds of the alliance’s defence spending. NATO diplomats say the wrangling over any new defence investment pledge — which requires the consensus of all allies — was expected to run right up to the summit in mid-July.

European heavyweight France also backed the two-percent minimum but said additional spending must be well-focused. “What counts is two percent of useful and effective spending,” said Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said: “What is obvious is that if it was right to commit to spend two percent in 2014, it is even more right now we live in a more dangerous world.

“There is a full-fledged war going on in, in Ukraine in Europe, and then we see the persistent threat of terrorism and we see also the challenges that China is posing.” He insisted NATO members “should move from regarding the two percent as a ceiling to regarding the two percent as a floor of GDP”.

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