USA TODAY US Edition

Don’t worry about Trump, Biden tells NATO

Vice president vows that U.S. won’t hesitate to defend allies if necessary

- Gregory Korte @gregorykor­te

Vice President Biden reassured NATO allies Tuesday that the United States will defend them from an attack, despite misgivings about the North Atlantic treaty from Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump.

Referring to Trump as “a presidenti­al candidate in the other party,” Biden told Baltic state leaders that Trump’s hesitation to defend NATO allies is “nothing that should be taken seriously, because I don’t think he understand­s what Article 5 is.”

Article 5 is the provision in the NATO treaty that requires all allies to respond collective­ly to an attack on any one ally. It’s been invoked only once, by the United States, in response to the terrorist attacks of 2001.

“I want to make it clear, absolutely clear to all the people of the Baltic States, we have pledged our sacred honor — the United States of America — our sacred honor to the NATO treaty,” Biden said in Riga, Latvia, where he met with the leaders of Estonia and Lithuania. “We mean what we say. We have never reneged on any commitment we have made. Our sacred honor is at stake.”

Trump has rattled NATO allies with a number of pronouncem­ents about the 67-year-old treaty organizati­on, complainin­g that European allies don’t pay their fair share on defense and suggest- ing NATO needs to transition from a Cold War-era check on Russian power to an alliance that can cope with the modern-day threats of terrorism.

President Obama has voiced those same concerns over the years. In what would be a reversal of U.S. policy, Trump has suggested he would make the mutual defense of NATO allies contingent on whether an attacked country pays the benchmark 2% of its economy on military spending. In an interview with The New

York Times last month, Trump said he’d like NATO allies to pay their dues. If they don’t, “I would be absolutely prepared to tell those countries, ‘Congratula­tions, you will be defending yourself.’ ”

It appeared that the Baltic State presidents were reassured by Biden’s visit. At a joint news conference, Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves said, “For us, we have never doubted” Article 5.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskai­te said the NATO alliance is “already long-lasting ” and she was sure it would continue after the elections, “no matter what.”

Biden began a four-day foreign trip Monday that will include stops in Ankara, Turkey, and Stockholm.

It’s unusual for a vice president to bring up campaign politics while overseas. White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the remarks were appropriat­e, given the concern by NATO allies.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, AP ?? Donald Trump
EVAN VUCCI, AP Donald Trump

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