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NATO's commitment to spend 5% of GDP on defense by 2035 was meant to unify the alliance, but it's revealing dangerous fault ...
NATO leaders are expected to agree by Wednesday that member countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense ...
Opinion
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NATO: The No-Exit Trap of Hotel California?
My analysis of the beginnings of cracks in NATO had been published with a short delay, just enough to become obsolete. I pointed to the two referendum initiatives in Slovenia -one on military spending ...
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez walked away from this week's NATO summit with an opt-out from spending more on defense. On Thursday, the progressive Spanish leader stuck by his decision to ...
The U.S. push for increased defense spending from its Asian allies mirrors the Cold War-era experience of NATO, where U.S. pressure led to gradual but necessary increases in defense capabilities.
MADRID (AP) — Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez walked away from this week’s NATO summit with an opt-out from spending more on defense. He also left with fresh threats of tariffs from U.S ...
After lobbying by US President Donald Trump, NATO leaders have promised to boost annual defence spending to 5% of their countries’ gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035. A NATO statement released ...
MADRID (AP) — Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez walked away from this week’s NATO summit with an opt-out from spending more on defense. He also left with fresh threats of tariffs from U.S ...
At the military alliance's summit Wednesday, members agreed to raise their defense spending to 5% of GDP. But Sánchez secured a last-minute exemption, saying that Spain will only spend up to 2.1% ...
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is sticking by his decision to break with NATO allies this week from spending more on defense. He responded to additional tariff threats from U.S. President ...
MADRID (AP) — Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez walked away from this week's NATO summit with an opt-out from spending more on defense. He also left with fresh threats of tariffs from U.S ...
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is sticking by his decision to break with NATO allies this week from spending more on defense. He responded to additional tariff threats from U.S. President ...