NATO countries' defense spending has approached 4% of GDP. Rütte… (нато · оборона · расход)
NATO countries' defense spending has approached 4% of GDP. Rütte looks optimistically at the goal of 5% of GDP on defense for European NATO members and Canada.
Consensus
- European NATO members and Canada have increased defense spending to approximately 4% of GDP.
- The goal set at the 2023 Hague summit is to reach 5% of GDP on defense by 2035.
- Defense expenditures in Europe and Canada rose by nearly 20% compared to the previous year.
- Additional investments over two years (2025–2026) amount to $258 billion.
- The NATO summit is scheduled for July 7–8 in Ankara.
- Mark Rutte, NATO Secretary General, emphasized that current trends are positive and called for clear plans from member states.
Points of divergence
- NATO countries cannot spend allocated defense funds due to insufficient capacity of the defense industry to scale up production within one or two years. — vesti
- The U.S. administration is promoting a new NATO concept where Europe takes greater responsibility for its own defense, and countries with high military spending may receive preferential treatment from Washington, such as priority in purchasing American weapons. — kommerstant
- Mark Rutte expressed optimism about achieving the 5% target by 2035, noting that progress is already impressive after just one year of a ten-year timeline. — interfax
Coverage (3 sources)
- NATO countries cannot spend money on defense due to low industrial capacity — Вести
- NATO countries' defense spending approaches 4% of GDP — Коммерсантъ
- Rutte Optimistic About NATO and Canada's Goal of 5% GDP for Defense — Интерфакс