Trump says not sure US should be spending anything on Nato
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
US President Donald Trump speaking to the media as he signs executive orders at the White House on Jan 23.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump on Jan 23 said he was not sure the United States should be spending anything on Nato, telling reporters the US was protecting Nato members, but they were “not protecting us”.
Mr Trump earlier demanded that other members of the transatlantic alliance spend 5 per cent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defence – a huge increase from the current 2 per cent goal and a level that no Nato country, including the United States, currently reaches.”
“I’m not sure we should be spending anything, but we should certainly be helping them,” Mr Trump told reporters after signing an executive order in the Oval Office. “We’re protecting them. They’re not protecting us.”
“They should up their 2 per cent to 5 per cent,” he said, repeating his remarks earlier to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Washington finances 15.8 per cent of the 32-member military alliance’s yearly expenditure of around US$3.5 billion (S$4.75 billion). That is the joint-largest share, alongside Germany’s, according to a Nato breakdown for 2024.
Indirect US financial contributions to the alliance – which is made up of the US, Canada and more than two dozen European countries – include military forces but do not form part of the organisation’s annual budget.
The overall US defence budget outstrips those of other Nato members and totalled US$816.7 billion in 2023, more than half of the total expenditure of the alliance as a whole.
Mr Trump’s new secretary of state, Mr Marco Rubio, spoke to Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Jan 22 and reinforced the US commitment to the alliance, while the two also “discussed the importance of having capable defence Allies and real burden sharing”, the State Department said on Jan 23.
Officials from Nato countries and analysts say Nato won’t heed Mr Trump’s proposal for such a massive hike in defence spending but will likely agree to go beyond its current target.
Analysts say a 5 per cent figure would be politically and economically impossible for almost all members. However, a new target is likely to be agreed at a Nato summit in The Hague in June, spurred by fears that Russia may attack a Nato country after Ukraine and by Mr Trump’s exhortations, officials said.
Some expect agreement on a target of around 3 per cent of GDP. But even that would be a stretch for many, who barely meet or fall short of the 2 per cent goal now, a decade after it was set. Eight Nato members do not meet the current target. REUTERS

