Natoโs 32 members have pledged to meet Donald Trumpโs demand to increase defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP to secure protection from the US, promising โannual plans showing a credible, incremental pathโ to the goal.
In a joint statement released during a summit of the alliance in The Hague on Wednesday, the allies also said they โreaffirm our ironclad commitment to collective defenceโ.
A review of the spending goal would take place in 2029, the communiquรฉ said.
Officials told the FT that the text agreed by the leaders was kept to just five paragraphs, in line with Nato secretary-general Mark Rutteโs strategy of keeping the meeting short, focused and as uncomplicated as possible to avoid losing Trumpโs attention.
By contrast, the last two Nato summit communiquรฉs, from Washington and Vilnius, were 44 and 90 paragraphs long, respectively.
โAllies commit to invest 5% of GDP annually on core defence requirements as well as defence-and security-related spending by 2035 to ensure our individual and collective obligations,โ the statement said.
The text was intended to ease Trumpโs long-held irritation over what he has said was over-reliance by European allies on US defence spending.
In response to Trumpโs assertion last week that the new 5 per cent defence spending pledge would not apply to Washington, Rutte said the US is โmore or less thereโ already.
When asked during the summit to clarify his stance on Article 5, Natoโs mutual defence pact, Trump said: โThatโs why Iโm here,โ adding that if he didnโt stand with the alliance, โI wouldnโt be here.โ
The statement contained just one reference to Russia, citing the โlong-term threat posed by Russia to Euro-Atlantic securityโ and one sentence referencing โenduring sovereign commitments to provide support to Ukraineโ.
Trump is sceptical about treating Russia as an adversary and has been lukewarm in his backing of Ukraine.
The communiquรฉ featured the wording โallies agreeโ to the spending promise, rather than the โwe agreeโ that was in previous drafts and was vetoed by Spain.
Madrid had argued it could deliver the required military capabilities demanded by Nato by spending less than 5 per cent of GDP.


