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Starmer says Trump is 'absolutely committed to the importance of Nato' after president raises doubts about Article 5 'collective defence' principle at tense summit
Starmer says Trump is 'absolutely committed to the importance of Nato' after president raises doubts about Article 5 'collective defence' principle at tense summit

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Starmer says Trump is 'absolutely committed to the importance of Nato' after president raises doubts about Article 5 'collective defence' principle at tense summit

Keir Starmer insisted Donald Trump is 'absolutely committed to the importance of Nato ' today after the president raised doubts about the collective defence principle. The PM played down alarm about whether US stands by Article 5 of the military alliance after Mr Trump said the meaning 'depends on your definition'. Leaders are holding a tense gathering in the The Hague with fears over America distancing itself from the structure that has underpinned world peace since the Second World War. They are due to sign off a new Nato target for defence spending to hit 3.5 per cent of GDP by 2035 - with another 1.5 per cent on related 'resilience' budgets. However, some nations have signalled they do not view the level as a hard commitment, while there are questions about where the UK can find the extra £30billion. Having demanded everyone else sign up to the figure, Mr Trump has signalled that he does not believe the US needs to meet it. The summit has been kept shorter than in previous years, amid concerns that Mr Trump either might not turn up or could leave early - as he did at the G7 in Canada last week. Sir Keir is also scrambling to build bridges with Mr Trump after failing to line up squarely behind his decision to bomb Iran nuclear sites. He insisted after talks with Mr Trump at the G7 last week that he did not believe Mr Trump would strike Tehran. The PM has announced that the UK is buying new US jets that can carry nuclear weapons. Asked en route to the Netherlands whether he would abide by Article 5, Mr Trump said it 'depends on your definition' and there were 'numerous definitions'. 'I'm committed to being their friends. I'm going to give you an exact definition when I get there,' he said. Pressed on the remarks as he arrived for the summit meetings this morning, Sir Keir said: 'Nato is as relevant and as important today as it's ever been. 'We live in a very volatile world, and today is about the unity of Nato, showing that strength. 'We're bigger than we were before, we're stronger than we were before.' On the issue of Article 5, Sir Keir added: 'I think it's very important that we stand here as allies, and we do stand here as allies, coming together, absolutely committed to the importance of Nato, particularly at this point in a very volatile world.' The White House has reacted furiously after leaked US intelligence reports suggested the attack on Iran's nuclear programme over the weekend have only set it back by a few months. Mr Trump previously suggested that sites had been completely obliterated. The president's press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying it was 'flat out wrong'. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear programme,' she said in a statement. Mr Trump also condemned the leak in a post on Truth Social, calling the US raid 'one of the most successful military strikes in history'. 'THE NUCLEAR SITES IN IRAN ARE COMPLETELY DESTROYED! BOTH THE TIIMES AND CNN ARE GETTING SLAMMED BY THE PUBLIC!' he wrote. Sir Keir said yesterday that the US had helped in 'alleviating' the threat of nuclear capability for Iran with their strikes on Saturday. Asked on his visit to The Hague whether he personally felt safe with Mr Trump in the White House and why others should, the Prime Minister told Channel 5 News: 'Look, I think what we've seen over the last few days is the Americans alleviating a threat to nuclear weaponry by the Iranians and bringing about a ceasefire in the early hours of today. 'I think now what needs to happen is that ceasefire needs to be maintained, and that will be the focus of our attention, our engagement, our discussions, because that ceasefire provides the space for the negotiations that need to take place.' After the ceasefire was initially struck early on Tuesday, Israel claimed Iran had violated the deal by carrying out strikes after it came into force. Asked en route to the Netherlands whether he would abide by Article 5, Mr Trump said it 'depends on your definition' and there were 'numerous definitions' Mr Trump called for Israel to withdraw its warplanes, and claimed both it and Iran 'don't know what the f*** they're doing' as he departed for the summit in the Netherlands. The UK has continued to evacuate Britons out of Israel, and a second flight left Tel Aviv on Tuesday. The Foreign Office confirmed the plane had left Israel and said further flights would be considered depending on demand. In a conversation with the French and German leaders last night, Sir Keir 'reflected on the volatile situation in the Middle East,' according to a Downing Street spokeswoman. The leaders agreed that 'now was the time for diplomacy and for Iran to come to the negotiating table', the spokeswoman added.

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