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NATO calls for 3.5% of GDP on defence budgets: Dutch PM

NATO calls for 3.5% of GDP on defence budgets: Dutch PM

The Advertiser09-05-2025

Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof says the NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product on their defence 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 two per cent of GDP.
They are expected to set a new goal at a meeting in The Hague on June 25.
President Donald Trump insists that US allies should commit to spending at least five per cent, 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 per cent hard military spending by 2032".
Rutte also wrote that he expects a commitment to "1.5 per cent related spending such as infrastructure, cybersecurity and things like that. Also achievable by 2032," Schoof said.
While the two figures do add up to five per cent, factoring in infrastructure and cybersecurity would change the basis on which NATO calculates defence spending.
The seven-year time frame is also short by the alliance's usual standards.
Asked at NATO's Brussels headquarters about his demand, Rutte said: "I'm not going to confirm the figures".
He said that "there are many rumors floating around" as NATO envoys discuss the new spending goal.
NATO foreign ministers are likely to debate the numbers again at a meeting in Antalya, Turkey next Wednesday and Thursday.
Rutte reaffirmed his public position that: "if we stick at the two per cent, we cannot defend ourselves. So we have to really increase defense spending".
Standing alongside Rutte, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that for Germany currently, each one per cent of GDP represents around 45 billion euros ($A80 billion).
Germany was estimated to have spent 2.1 per cent on its military budget last year, according to NATO figures.
But Merz said that NATO allies "also need to discuss infrastructure as well," including civilian infrastructure – roads, bridges, air and seaports – so that armies can move more quickly around Europe, and not just pure military spending.
It remains difficult to see how many allies might reach even 3.5 per cent.
NATO's most recent estimates show that 22 allies would reach the two per cent goal last year, compared to a previous forecast of 23.
Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Italy, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain would not, although Spain does expect to reach the two per cent goal in 2025, a year too late.
Even the United States was estimated to have spent 3.19 per cent of GDP in 2024, down from 3.68 per cent a decade ago when all members vowed to increase spending after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula.
It's the only ally whose spending has dropped.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof says the NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product on their defence 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 two per cent of GDP.
They are expected to set a new goal at a meeting in The Hague on June 25.
President Donald Trump insists that US allies should commit to spending at least five per cent, 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 per cent hard military spending by 2032".
Rutte also wrote that he expects a commitment to "1.5 per cent related spending such as infrastructure, cybersecurity and things like that. Also achievable by 2032," Schoof said.
While the two figures do add up to five per cent, factoring in infrastructure and cybersecurity would change the basis on which NATO calculates defence spending.
The seven-year time frame is also short by the alliance's usual standards.
Asked at NATO's Brussels headquarters about his demand, Rutte said: "I'm not going to confirm the figures".
He said that "there are many rumors floating around" as NATO envoys discuss the new spending goal.
NATO foreign ministers are likely to debate the numbers again at a meeting in Antalya, Turkey next Wednesday and Thursday.
Rutte reaffirmed his public position that: "if we stick at the two per cent, we cannot defend ourselves. So we have to really increase defense spending".
Standing alongside Rutte, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that for Germany currently, each one per cent of GDP represents around 45 billion euros ($A80 billion).
Germany was estimated to have spent 2.1 per cent on its military budget last year, according to NATO figures.
But Merz said that NATO allies "also need to discuss infrastructure as well," including civilian infrastructure – roads, bridges, air and seaports – so that armies can move more quickly around Europe, and not just pure military spending.
It remains difficult to see how many allies might reach even 3.5 per cent.
NATO's most recent estimates show that 22 allies would reach the two per cent goal last year, compared to a previous forecast of 23.
Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Italy, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain would not, although Spain does expect to reach the two per cent goal in 2025, a year too late.
Even the United States was estimated to have spent 3.19 per cent of GDP in 2024, down from 3.68 per cent a decade ago when all members vowed to increase spending after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula.
It's the only ally whose spending has dropped.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof says the NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product on their defence 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 two per cent of GDP.
They are expected to set a new goal at a meeting in The Hague on June 25.
President Donald Trump insists that US allies should commit to spending at least five per cent, 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 per cent hard military spending by 2032".
Rutte also wrote that he expects a commitment to "1.5 per cent related spending such as infrastructure, cybersecurity and things like that. Also achievable by 2032," Schoof said.
While the two figures do add up to five per cent, factoring in infrastructure and cybersecurity would change the basis on which NATO calculates defence spending.
The seven-year time frame is also short by the alliance's usual standards.
Asked at NATO's Brussels headquarters about his demand, Rutte said: "I'm not going to confirm the figures".
He said that "there are many rumors floating around" as NATO envoys discuss the new spending goal.
NATO foreign ministers are likely to debate the numbers again at a meeting in Antalya, Turkey next Wednesday and Thursday.
Rutte reaffirmed his public position that: "if we stick at the two per cent, we cannot defend ourselves. So we have to really increase defense spending".
Standing alongside Rutte, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that for Germany currently, each one per cent of GDP represents around 45 billion euros ($A80 billion).
Germany was estimated to have spent 2.1 per cent on its military budget last year, according to NATO figures.
But Merz said that NATO allies "also need to discuss infrastructure as well," including civilian infrastructure – roads, bridges, air and seaports – so that armies can move more quickly around Europe, and not just pure military spending.
It remains difficult to see how many allies might reach even 3.5 per cent.
NATO's most recent estimates show that 22 allies would reach the two per cent goal last year, compared to a previous forecast of 23.
Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Italy, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain would not, although Spain does expect to reach the two per cent goal in 2025, a year too late.
Even the United States was estimated to have spent 3.19 per cent of GDP in 2024, down from 3.68 per cent a decade ago when all members vowed to increase spending after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula.
It's the only ally whose spending has dropped.
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof says the NATO's chief wants the 32 member countries to agree to start spending at least 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product on their defence 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 two per cent of GDP.
They are expected to set a new goal at a meeting in The Hague on June 25.
President Donald Trump insists that US allies should commit to spending at least five per cent, 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 per cent hard military spending by 2032".
Rutte also wrote that he expects a commitment to "1.5 per cent related spending such as infrastructure, cybersecurity and things like that. Also achievable by 2032," Schoof said.
While the two figures do add up to five per cent, factoring in infrastructure and cybersecurity would change the basis on which NATO calculates defence spending.
The seven-year time frame is also short by the alliance's usual standards.
Asked at NATO's Brussels headquarters about his demand, Rutte said: "I'm not going to confirm the figures".
He said that "there are many rumors floating around" as NATO envoys discuss the new spending goal.
NATO foreign ministers are likely to debate the numbers again at a meeting in Antalya, Turkey next Wednesday and Thursday.
Rutte reaffirmed his public position that: "if we stick at the two per cent, we cannot defend ourselves. So we have to really increase defense spending".
Standing alongside Rutte, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that for Germany currently, each one per cent of GDP represents around 45 billion euros ($A80 billion).
Germany was estimated to have spent 2.1 per cent on its military budget last year, according to NATO figures.
But Merz said that NATO allies "also need to discuss infrastructure as well," including civilian infrastructure – roads, bridges, air and seaports – so that armies can move more quickly around Europe, and not just pure military spending.
It remains difficult to see how many allies might reach even 3.5 per cent.
NATO's most recent estimates show that 22 allies would reach the two per cent goal last year, compared to a previous forecast of 23.
Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Italy, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain would not, although Spain does expect to reach the two per cent goal in 2025, a year too late.
Even the United States was estimated to have spent 3.19 per cent of GDP in 2024, down from 3.68 per cent a decade ago when all members vowed to increase spending after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula.
It's the only ally whose spending has dropped.

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