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NATO members will be expected to spend 3.5% of their GDP on core defence such as troops and weapons – the items currently ...
The NATO alliance agreed to a new defense spending target of 5% GDP by 2035, after a record number of members met the prior 2% defense spending goal last year.
NATO members agreed to a big increase in their defence spending target to 5% of gross domestic product, as demanded by ...
In a statement, called the Hague Declaration, members also say: "We reaffirm our ironclad commitment to collective defence".
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to meet a new Nato target to spend 5% of the UK's GDP on national security by 2035. At a Nato summit in the Netherlands, 32 member countries including the ...
Before this week's annual NATO summit had even begun, allies reportedly agreed on Sunday to hike their defense spending to 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035. Getting to that target, however ...
Achieving NATO’s higher defence spending target of 3.5% of GDP will increase budget deficits and public debt across the EU ...
A portion of the alliance's defense spending requirements are likely to spur some creative accounting among member nations.
A look at where defense spending stands among NATO: Measured as a portion of GDP, Poland is NATO’s biggest military spender ...
If NATO states had all spent 3.5% of GDP on defence last year, that would have amounted to some $1.75 trillion. ... HOW DOES THE NATO TARGET COMPARE TO OTHER COUNTRIES’ DEFENCE SPENDING?
Before this week's annual NATO summit had even begun, allies reportedly agreed on Sunday to hike their defense spending to 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035. Getting to that target ...