Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump damaging NATO’s credibilit­y

- By Max Boot

President Donald Trump likes his North Korea template so much that he is applying it to NATO. Here’s how it works: Ramp up the alarming rhetoric. Escalate the crisis. Then hold a meeting. Act buddy-buddy. Claim that the problem is fixed because you’re a master deal-maker — even though nothing has actually changed.

Just as Trump preceded the Singapore summit with gibes against “Little Rocket Man,” so, too, before his arrival in Brussels, he insulted NATO. Last week, for example, he complained: “They want to protect against Russia and yet they pay billions of dollars to Russia, and we’re the schmucks paying for the whole thing.”

At a breakfast with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g, he said that Germany is “captive” to Russia, because it “will be getting 60 to 70 percent of their energy from Russia and a new pipeline.” (In fact, Russian natural gas will meet just a sliver of Germany’s energy needs; currently, that figure is 9 percent.) Trump’s insult drew a biting retort from Chancellor Angela Merkel, who pointed out that she grew up in a “a part of Germany that was controlled by the Soviet Union,” and that today Germans “make our own decisions.”

Trump also repeated an old canard, claiming that NATO countries are “delinquent for many years in payments that have not been made. Will they reimburse the U.S.?” In reality, as countless fact-checkers have pointed out in vain, NATO nations don’t owe the United States a penny.

But Trump is impervious to any informatio­n that contradict­s his prejudices. At a closeddoor meeting Thursday, he made a veiled threat to leave the alliance. He never did say why he wants NATO to spend more, since he does not view Russia as a pressing threat. Rather than calling Russia an enemy, he describes it as a “competitor” — the same way he views Germany.

A few minutes later, Mr. Hyde transforme­d into Dr. Jekyll. At a news conference, Trump claimed that NATO was “much stronger than it was two days ago” and that the United States was now being treated fairly at last, because NATO had just agreed to massive increases in defense spending. “The additional money that they’re willing to put up has been really amazing,” he gushed.

Just one thing, though: French President Emmanuel Macron immediatel­y denied that NATO had made any new commitment­s. In 2014, shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, NATO members agreed to boost defense spending to at least 2 percent of GDP by 2024. (Today the Canadian and European members are at 1.47 percent.) Trump demanded that they accelerate that timeline — and even aim for 4 percent of GDP, a goal that the United States (at 3.5 percent) does not itself meet. “A communiqué was issued yesterday,” Macron said. “This communiqué is clear. It reaffirms the 2 percent by 2024 commitment­s. That’s all.”

The president’s bizarre performanc­e in Brussels, blowing hot and cold, only adds to growing doubts in Europe about whether they can still count on Uncle Sam.

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