Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump vows U.S. backing for NATO

After threat to go own way, president reaffirms support

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BRUSSELS — President Donald Trump reaffirmed support for NATO on Thursday, but only after stirring more discord with a vague threat that the United States could go its own way if the allies resisted his demands for additional military spending, making a dramatic exit after a summit punctuated by his escalating complaints.

A year after fueling doubts about whether Washington would defend allies who refuse to pay their fair share, Trump went into the two-day 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.

“Now we’re very happy and have a very, very powerful, very, very strong NATO — much stronger than it was two days ago,” Trump declared after what he described as a “fantastic meeting.”

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.

Trump claimed member nations had agreed to boost their defense budgets significan­tly and reaffirmed — after days of griping that the U.S. was being taken advantage of by its allies — that the U.S. remains faithful to the accord.

“The United States’ commitment to NATO remains very strong,” Trump told reporters at a surprise news conference after an emergency session of NATO members held to address his threats.

Neither Trump nor NATO offered specifics on what Trump said he had achieved. French President Emmanuel Macron quickly disputed Trump’s claim that NATO allies had agreed to boost defense spending beyond their existing goal of 2 percent of gross domestic product by 2024.

“I can tell you that NATO now is a really a fine-tuned machine,” Trump said. “People are paying money that they never paid before. They’re happy to do it. And the United States is being treated much more fairly.”

But several leaders said the gathering produced no new spending commitment­s. Instead, they said, members reaffirmed the need to stay on track with military-budget increases that have already been underway and were branded insufficie­nt by Trump a day earlier.

“I made clear that we know that we have to do more and that we have been doing so for quite a while,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g cited a “new sense of urgency, and all allies agreed to redouble their efforts.”

U.S. leaders for decades have pushed NATO allies to spend more on defense to share the collective defense burden more equitably.

The White House hastily called the news conference after reports that Trump had unleashed a tirade at a private morning meeting against member countries he complained were still not spending enough on their militaries. Trump used the news conference to hail himself, again, as a “stable genius,” saying he deserved “total credit” for pushing the allies to increase their military spending by more than previously agreed to.

According to a person briefed on the meeting, Trump told other NATO leaders that if their countries did not meet the 2 percent standard by January, the United States “would go it alone,” a comment that some interprete­d as a threat to withdraw from the alliance. (Other news reports quoted diplomats who said the president used slightly different wording — saying that he would “do my own thing” — but he was not specific about what he meant in either case.)

Trump asserted that the United States shouldered “probably 90 percent of the cost of NATO.” U.S. contributi­ons actually represent about 67 percent of all military expenditur­es by alliance members.

The United States pays 22 percent of NATO’s budget, which covers things like offices, salaries and some equipment used in joint operations. According to the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies, of the $603 billion that the United States spends on the military each year, about $31 billion goes to Europe.

As Trump boarded Air Force One and flew to London for the next leg of his European trip, he left allies struggling to explain what had transpired. Macron called the meetings “active and demanding,” but rejected Trump’s assertion that the NATO member countries had agreed to anything that was not already in place. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte of Italy sounded a similar theme.

“Italy inherited spending commitment­s to NATO, commitment­s that we did not change, so no increase in spending,” Conte said

Macron added that the meeting had ended with a stronger alliance because of Trump’s reaffirmat­ion of his commitment to it.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Katie Rogers of The New York Times; and by Jonathan Lemire, Jill Colvin, Zeke Miller, Darlene Superville, Ken Thomas, Lorne Cook, Jamey Keaten and Raf Casert of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT ?? With Secretary of State Mike Pompeo beside him Thursday, President Donald Trump says at a news conference after a meeting of NATO leaders in Brussels that he believes in NATO but Western allies need to increase their defense spending.
AP/GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT With Secretary of State Mike Pompeo beside him Thursday, President Donald Trump says at a news conference after a meeting of NATO leaders in Brussels that he believes in NATO but Western allies need to increase their defense spending.

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