Las Vegas Review-Journal

NATO leaders pledge to stay united

2024 spending targets still part of agreement

- By Lorne Cook and Jamey Keaten The Associated Press

BRUSSELS — NATO leaders pledged Thursday to stand united against foes like Russia despite a tumultuous summit that saw President Donald Trump rip into his allies for failing to boost defense spending, casting a dark cloud over the world’s biggest security alliance.

A year after fueling doubts about whether Washington would defend allies who refuse to pay their fair share, Trump launched into the twoday summit in Brussels by berating Germany, among others. Still, by the time it was over he was ebullient, saying that European allies and Canada had “really stepped up their commitment” — and intimating that his relentless hectoring had forced other allies to spend more than NATO’S long-term goal of 2 percent of GDP on defense.

He was, however, short on details. That’s because, despite the political rhetoric, Trump — like his other 28 allies — signed a summit communique that had been agreed to by their ambassador­s last weekend, five days before the summit began. Not a word was changed, officials confirmed.

The 23-page text did contain a reference to an old spending pledge the leaders made in 2014 after Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, convincing NATO of the importance of halting spending cuts. The more than 20 allies not spending 2 percent of GDP on their national military budgets pledged at the time to start investing more as their economies grew, and to move toward that goal by 2024.

Quizzed about whether Trump had demanded that his allies boost their budgets beyond 2 percent, Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g — who as NATO chairman has the unenviable job of speaking for all 29 allies — said: “We have made many decisions. You can read them in the declaratio­n.”

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais ?? The Associated Press President Donald Trump said that European allies and Canada had “really stepped up their commitment” to spending goals Thursday at the NATO Summit in Brussels.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais The Associated Press President Donald Trump said that European allies and Canada had “really stepped up their commitment” to spending goals Thursday at the NATO Summit in Brussels.

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