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Germany backs Donald Trump goal for Nato to spend 5% of GDP on defence


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Germany has signalled it will raise defence spending in line with US President Donald Trumpโ€™s request for Nato members to reach 5 per cent of GDP, as conservative chancellor Friedrich Merz vows to turn the Bundeswehr into Europeโ€™s โ€œstrongest militaryโ€.

Speaking at a meeting in Antalya on Thursday, German foreign minister Johann Wadephul said Berlin was โ€œfollowingโ€ Trump on his demand that Nato allies reach a 5 per cent goal. Currently the alliance has a 2 per cent spending target.

โ€œWe see this (request) as a clear commitment by the United States of America to Article 5โ€, Natoโ€™s collective defence clause, Wadephul added.

But Wadephul also signalled that the way the country would meet the target would be by embracing a proposal by Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte.

The Dutchman has called for Nato members to reach 3.5 per cent of GDP on โ€œhard military spendingโ€ by 2032, to which he has suggested adding 1.5 per cent of GDP on โ€œrelated spendingโ€ including infrastructure and cyber security.

Rutte has argued that strengthened infrastructure needed to be part of overall security spending, and cited the example of bridges โ€œto drive our cars, but also if necessary to make sure that the bridge will hold a tank. All these expenditures have to be taken into accountโ€, he said.

The Rutte proposal is seen as a compromise that would enable Trump to claim a win at Natoโ€™s leaders summit in The Hague next month.

Berlin is set to meet the 2 per cent target this year, after having relied heavily on the US for its protection over the past 80 years.

โ€œWhen it comes to the core defence spending, we need to do much, much more,โ€ Rutte reiterated to reporters in Antalya, adding that Russia could reconstitute its armed forces within 3-5 years.

Of Natoโ€™s 32 members, just Poland is currently close to the 5 per cent target, while big economies including Italy and Spain are below the old target. The Italian government this week informed Nato it had reached 2 per cent, although it remains unclear what expenditures it included in the calculations.

Rutte said at the meeting on Thursday that all countries were striving to reach 2 per cent by next month. Poland and the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, who all border Russia, have pledged to go beyond the 5 per cent target.

US secretary of state Marco Rubio said that Nato was โ€œonly as strong as its weakest link, and we want no weak linksโ€.

Germany has stepped up efforts after Merzโ€™s Christian Democrats won parliamentary elections in February.

On the day of his partyโ€™s victory, Merz said Germany needed to โ€œachieve independenceโ€ from the US. Like many in Germany, the staunch Atlanticist has been shaken by the hostile tone emanating from the White House since Trumpโ€™s election. The Trump administration was โ€œlargely indifferent to Europeโ€™s fateโ€, Merz said at the time.

Merz managed to change the countryโ€™s constitution before taking office as chancellor to remove the borrowing cap for defence spending, vowing to invest hundreds of billions of euros into the Bundeswehr. He struck a deal with his coalition partners, the Social Democrats, to set up a โ‚ฌ500bn fund to modernise the countryโ€™s ageing infrastructure.

In his first speech as chancellor to the Bundestag on Wednesday, Merz pledged to โ€œprovide all financial resources that the German Armed Forces need to become the strongest military in Europe in conventional termsโ€.

โ€œStrength deters aggression; weakness invites aggression,โ€ Merz said.

Additional reporting by Laura Pitel in Berlin and Amy Kazmin in Rome



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