The Standard (St. Catharines)

Trudeau bills defence spending plan

Prime minister responds to U.S. President Trump’s spending call with 10-year arrangemen­t

- TERESA WRIGHT

BRUSSELS — Donald Trump boasted Thursday of single-handedly winning commitment­s from his fellow NATO leaders to meet and exceed a defence spending target of two per cent of GDP — even though Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke only of continuing with Canada’s existing military plan.

At a news conference wrapping up the two-day NATO summit in Brussels, Trudeau was pressed to provide more details about the U.S. president’s sudden insistence that allies have agreed to spend more — and to do it more quickly.

Trudeau said he did agree to uphold Canada’s commitment to the 2014 Wales NATO summit pledge on defence investment, but took pains to point out the declaratio­n technicall­y states NATO allies would merely “aim to move toward” the two per cent guideline within a decade.

“That is something we certainly agree with,” Trudeau told a news conference.

“Leading up to 2014 and the Wales conference, NATO countries had been underinves­ting in their military and declining in their military and defence investment­s — including, unfortunat­ely, in Canada.

“There was a commitment to reverse that declining investment and start moving toward two per cent, and that’s exactly what we agreed with as a government when we came in.”

During his own news conference Thursday, Trump was asked how he would increase pressure on Canada, Germany and Italy if any of the three failed to meet the two per cent target.

“Well, they will,” he responded. “I have no doubt about it.

They all made commitment­s and they will be up to two per cent. It will be over a relatively short period of years.”

Trudeau was not the only leader who seemed at odds with Trump’s understand­ing of what emerged from an emergency meeting of NATO leaders that derailed the final sessions of the summit’s closing day and set off another firestorm of controvers­y with the U.S. president at its centre.

French President Emmanuel Macron quickly disputed Trump’s claim that NATO allies had agreed to boost defence spending beyond the two per cent benchmark, citing the group’s communique that lays out the original goal.

“It confirms the goal of two per cent by 2024. That’s all,” said Macron, who also denied talk of Trump threatenin­g to withdraw from the alliance.

“President Trump never at any moment, either in public or in private, threatened to withdraw from NATO.”

Trudeau touted his government’s long-awaited defence policy review, released last June, as the answer to Trump’s latest demands for more spending from NATO allies. And he said Canada has promised to reverse a decline in military resources with an eye toward the two per cent target.

Including that commitment, however, Canada’s current defence spending plans are only expected to bring it to 1.4 per cent of GDP by 2024 — well short of the Wales target.

“You know, the two per cent was a range, a goal, it wasn’t something they were committed to. Now it’s a commitment. That’s a big difference,” Trump said.

“It was just sort of like this amorphous number out there. Now it’s a commitment, a real commitment.”

Canada was never expected to agree to Trump’s spending demands. Instead, Trudeau’s announceme­nt prior to the summit — plans to lead a new training mission in Iraq and an extension on its role with a NATO battle group in Latvia through 2023 — were aimed at demonstrat­ing a commitment beyond mere dollars.

While in Latvia earlier this week, when asked about plans to meet the target, the prime minister made it clear he had no plans to double Canada’s defence budget.

“Ultimately, the more important metrics are always, ‘Are countries stepping up consistent­ly with the capacities that NATO needs? Are we leading in different opportunit­ies? Are we contributi­ng the kinds of resources and demonstrat­ing the kind of commitment to the alliance that always needs to be there?’”

Following Thursday’s emergency session of NATO members, Trump declared the military alliance to be “very unified, very strong, no problem.”

He said he successful­ly pushed for NATO members to spend more of their budgets on defence and at a faster pace than expected.

“We have a very powerful, very strong NATO, much stronger than it was two days ago,” Trump said at his closing news conference, citing Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g as crediting the U.S. approach for the progress.

“Secretary General Stoltenber­g gives us total credit — meaning me, I guess, in this case. Total credit.”

The summit’s dramatic, chaotic conclusion — complete with the U.S. president suddenly making demands following a formal communique — bore a striking similarity to Trump’s departure from last month’s G7 meetings in Quebec.

There, while on board Air Force One, he used his Twitter feed to rescind his support of a joint communique and slam Trudeau personally after hearing the prime minister repeat Canada’s insistence it would defend itself from U.S. aggression on trade.

 ?? OLIVIER MATTHYS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at a press conference after a summit of heads of state and government at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium, Thursday, July 12, 2018.
OLIVIER MATTHYS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at a press conference after a summit of heads of state and government at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium, Thursday, July 12, 2018.

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