The Borneo Post

Trump claims victory in Nato spending dispute

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BRUSSELS: Donald Trump said Nato leaders agreed Thursday to a big boost in defence spending after crisis talks in Brussels, but France’s Emmanuel Macron appeared to contradict the US president.

Trump claimed victory after bitterly criticisin­g key allies, notably Germany, for failing to pay their way at one of the most fractious summits in Nato’s 70year history. He triggered an emergency session on the spending issue, before emerging from the turmoil to say “I believe in Nato” in response to reports that he had threatened to pull out.

“Tremendous progress has been made, everyone’s agreed to substantia­lly up their commitment, they’re going to up it at levels they’ve never thought of before,” Trump told a press conference before leaving for a visit to Britain.

“It’s been amazing to see the level of spirit in that room.”

Trump blazed into the summit on Wednesday by demanding that allies reach their commitment to increase spending to two percent of GDP “immediatel­y” – instead of by 2024 as previously agreed. He then stunned allies by telling them to eventually double the figure to a punishing four percent.

But Macron disputed Trump’s claims, saying that the joint statement the leaders had signed went no further than what had previously been agreed, apart from setting out how some countries plan to get there.

“The communique is clear: it reaffirms the commitment to two percent (of GDP),” said Macron, who was photograph­ed smiling and sharing a hug with Trump on Wednesday despite recent tensions between the two.

In an apparent swipe at Trump, he added: “Sometimes the corridors, comments and tweets take on more importance than what is negotiated, said or endorsed by heads of state.”

Macron, however, added that he thought Nato was now “much stronger” and dismissed reports that Trump had threatened to pull the United States out of Nato if the spending row was not resolved.

Trump himself said that “the US commitment to Nato remains very strong” and withdrawin­g was “unneccessa­ry”.

Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g took a more diplomatic approach on the spending row, saying that Trump was having an “impact” while refusing to confirm any increase beyond what was agreed in the statement.

“We understand this US president is very serious about defence spending and this is having an impact,” Stoltenber­g said. “Since President Trump was in Brussels last spring allies have added 41 billion extra for defence spending.”

Despite that, Stoltenber­g had been forced to call an extraordin­ary session of all 29 allies to discuss Trump’s demands, in what officials said was one of the first of its kind at a Nato summit for a decade.

Apart from the US, only three Nato countries hit the two-percent target in 2017 – Britain, Greece and Estonia – but four more are expected to clear the threshold this year.

Thesummitc­ameastrans­atlantic ties are already under strain due to US trade tariffs, along with fears that Trump’s summit on Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin will pull him further from Nato’s orbit. — AFP

 ??  ?? Emmanuel Macron
Emmanuel Macron
 ??  ?? Jens Stoltenber­g
Jens Stoltenber­g

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