European defense heavyweights say meeting Trump's military spending
target won't be easy
Send a link to a friend
[January 14, 2025] By
VANESSA GERA and MONIKA SCISLOWSKA
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — The defense ministers of Europe's five top
military spenders said Monday they want to continue increasing their
investments in defense but described meeting President-elect Donald
Trump's challenge for them to raise spending to 5% of their overall
economic output as complicated.
The defense ministers of Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Poland came
together near Warsaw for a meeting in a new format that they established
after Trump was re-elected last year. Their first meeting in this format
of five NATO members was held in Berlin in late November.
The five are seeking ways to maintain their support for Ukraine as U.S.
policy is expected to shift when Trump takes power. They also discussed
how to strengthen Ukraine’s own weapons production capacity.
The German minister, Boris Pistorius, stressed at the start of the
meeting that they all support a just peace for Ukraine, one in which
Kyiv has a say over its fate. There are concerns in Europe that Trump
could push Ukraine to make unacceptable concessions to Russia.
The defense leaders also addressed questions of military spending after
Trump recently called for NATO allies to increase their spending to 5%
of gross domestic product, a level that no NATO member has reached — not
even Poland, which is the closest, spending over 4% and expected to
approach 5% this year.
Several of the ministers said that focusing on the number as a
percentages isn't enough.
“I just think that a static debate about percentages doesn’t really help
us if it doesn’t ultimately lead to the implementation of what NATO has
agreed upon together, what the goals must be," Pistorius said at a joint
press conference. "In my opinion, that’s what matters."
[to top of second column] |
France's Minister of the Armed Forces Sebastien Lecornu attends a
news conference after a meeting of defense ministers of five NATO
countries to discuss coordinating their defense plans and support
for Ukraine, in the village of Helenow, near Warsaw, Poland, Monday,
Jan. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
He also said that for Germany to
invest 5% in defense would mean spending a little more than 40% of
its entire national budget on defense. “I think that would put an
end to the debate very quickly,” he said.
His Italian counterpart, Guido Crosetto, said his government knows
it needs to spend more on defense but also needs to weigh that
against reviving the economy.
“Increasing defense spending at a time of economic crisis is more
complicated than at other times,” Crosetto said. "If we combine the
two, that is, if we make the European defense industry one of the
ways in which we can revive the economy, we can combine the two.”
French Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu said that while there will
be increases in security spending, they should not all go to purely
military purposes but also should be used to protect society against
cyberattacks, terrorism, and other non-military threats.
“And you’re all repeating 2%, 3%, 4%, without really knowing what
the point is," Lecornu said, responding to a reporter's question.
"Well, let me be straightforward. The situation is worse than during
the Cold War. It’s worse than during the Cold War simply because we
have new areas that have become militarized, and these are largely
digital,” Lecornu said.
“And you can see that we are in a world in which we can be defeated
without having been invaded. And that means that the responsibility
for the defense of our countries will go well beyond military issues
alone," Lecornu said.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |