Trump telegraphs defense spending concerns ahead of NATO arrival
President Donald Trump on Tuesday injected some uncertainty over whether the U.S. would abide by the mutual defense guarantees outlined in the NATO treaty prior to his arrival at its summit — comments that could revive long-standing concern from European allies about his commitment to the military alliance.
While NATO leaders are expected to endorse a goal of spending 5% of their gross domestic product on their security, Spain says it won’t get there, and Slovakia says it reserves the right to decide for itself. Trump last week went as far as to argue that the U.S. should not have to abide by the 5% spending pledge, although he appeared to soften those comments on Tuesday.
By LUENA RODRIGUEZ-FEO VILEIRA, MICHAEL WARREN and CURTIS YEE June 24, 2025
Read the full story here AP NEWS
Author Profile
Latest entries
Economic Development06/24/2025Trump lashes out at Israel and Iran amid accusations of ceasefire violations
Human Rights06/24/2025Trump telegraphs defense spending concerns ahead of NATO arrival
Selected Media06/23/2025U.S. claims strikes caused ‘severe damage’ and warns Iran against retaliation
Gun Control06/23/2025Alarm grows after the US inserts itself into Israel’s war against Iran with strikes on nuclear sites