Trump again casts doubt on his commitment to Nato

Trump again casts doubt on his commitment to Nato

The US president makes it clear that nations that don’t invest in their militaries don’t deserve defence.

donald-trump
Donald Trump has repeatedly questioned the US’ dominant role in Nato as its strongest military and Europe’s security guarantor. (EPA Images pic)
WASHINGTON:
President Donald Trump on Thursday renewed doubts over his commitment to the Nato alliance, saying countries that aren’t spending adequately on their militaries don’t deserve defence.

“If they don’t pay, I’m not going to defend them,” he told reporters.

Trump has frequently questioned whether the US – by far the biggest military in the transatlantic alliance and ultimate guarantor of Europe’s security since World War II – should continue its central role in Nato.

The Republican, who began his second term in January, doubled down on his criticism that some Nato members do not spend enough on their defence budgets and overly rely on the US.

“They should be paying more,” he said.

Trump was responding to reporters after NBC News reported earlier Thursday that he is considering a plan to calibrate US military support in a way that favours member countries which spend a higher proportion of more of their GDP on defence.

Countries deemed to be underspending might not be defended if attacked, according to the reported plan.

This would weaken Nato’s core Article 5 which stipulates that any member attacked will be defended by all the others.

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