The Daily Courier

American president sows more discord

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With an important meeting of NATO leaders at hand, the 69-yearold alliance is fraying at the edges. Beyond coping with internatio­nal terrorism, Chinese expansioni­sm and Russia’s global adventures, the alliance faces a significan­t threat from within.

A dispute over spending among the 29 NATO states will likely dominate summit talks this week in Brussels, where U.S. President Donald Trump is taking an aggressive line against countries he says aren’t contributi­ng enough to collective security.

Trump cites a 2006 NATO goal that eventually would have all member states spend the equivalent of two per cent of their economic output on defence. That aspiration­al goal was reaffirmed in 2014, when NATO leaders agreed to “aim to move toward two per cent within a decade.”

Aiming to move toward a goal over 10 years is not the same as achieving it today. But Trump, who insists that the United States carries too much of the NATO burden, wants action now. This week it emerged that many NATO government­s, Canada included, received letters from Trump criticizin­g them for not meeting the two per cent target.

“There is growing frustratio­n in the United States that key allies like Canada have not stepped up defense spending as promised,” Trump wrote to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Few NATO states meet the target.

The U.S. spends about 3.5 per cent. Canada spends about 1.3 per cent, or $25.5 billion. The Trudeau government is aiming to increase defence spending to $32.7 billion by 2027, still short of the two per cent goal. Yet that might be the better option for Canada — gradual increases based on affordabil­ity, not arbitrary goals.

Spending is not the only area where Trump is out of sync with the rest of NATO.

Trump wants Russia and Vladimir Putin back in the G7. Only Italy’s new right-wing prime minister agrees. Trump hasn’t ruled out recognizin­g Russia’s seizure of Crimea and suggested the U.S. has too many troops in Germany.

That said, Trump praised newer NATO members for their spending. All are former Soviet client states: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania. He also praised France, which does plan a military buildup, and the U.K., which is close to the two per cent target. Yet Westminste­r also received one of Trump’s dunning letters.

For an alliance based on solidarity, disunity is the wrong message Trump should be taking to his meeting this month with the cunning Putin in Helsinki.

NATO is the most significan­t check on Putin’s global manipulati­ons. But lacking solidarity, the alliance is just a paper tiger, precisely what the Russian tyrant wants.

The Halifax Chronicle Herald

 ?? The Associated Press ?? U.S. President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as French President Emmanuel Macron looks on at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels on Wednesday.
The Associated Press U.S. President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as French President Emmanuel Macron looks on at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels on Wednesday.

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