BRUSSELS: US Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis will press European allies on Wednesday to stick to a promise to increase military budgets as the United States offers an increase in its own defence spending in Europe.
For the first time, NATO countries have submitted plans to show how they will reach a target to spend 2 percent of economic output on defence every year by 2024 after Trump threatened to withdraw US support for low-spending allies.
Fifteen of the 28 countries, excluding the United States, now have a strategy to meet a NATO benchmark first agreed in 2014 in response to Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region, following years of cuts to European defence budgets.
It is unclear whether that will be enough to impress US President Donald Trump when he attends a NATO summit in July.
While France plans to increase defence spending by more than a third between 2017 and 2025, Spain has said it will not meet the 2024 target, while Belgium and Italy are also lagging.
A multi-billion euro projected increase in Germany will not be enough to take Berlin up to 2 percent by 2024.
Mattis is expected to take a tough stance, according to Katie Wheelbarger, principal US deputy assistant secretary of defence for international security affairs.
“He will address those who don’t have national plans to meet 2 per cent and suggest they really need to develop those plans,” she told reporters.
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The issue of low defence spending in Europe has long been an irritant in Washington. But Russia’s military modernisation, Islamist militancy and electronic warfare on computer networks have underscored Europe’s heavy reliance on the United States.
According to NATO data, Britain, Greece, Romania and the Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania meet or are close to, the 2 per cent goal, while France and Turkey are among those countries set to reach it soon.
One area of tension lies in the language of the NATO spending pledge of 2014. Allies committed to “move toward” 2 per cent, while Trump now says 2 per cent is the “bare minimum.”
Trump has also set an example by proposing a $1.7 billion increase in military expenditure in Europe for 2019, as the United States leads NATO efforts to deter Russia.
But US officials have also sown confusion about their support for a new defence pact to coordinate European Union defence policy and allow countries to club together to buy arms.
Wheelbarger warned that “we don’t want to see EU efforts pulling requirements or activity away from NATO and into the EU.” The US envoy to NATO, Kay Bailey Hutchison, said there were concerns that US defence companies would be shut out.
“We do not want this to be a protectionist vehicle for the EU,” she said of the proposed pact.