NATO‘s European allies and Canada increased defence spending by 20 percent to $574 billion in 2025 compared to the previous year in real terms, alliance chief Mark Rutte said in his annual report published Thursday, urging NATO members to keep up the momentum.
“I expect Allies at the next NATO Summit in Ankara to show they are on a clear and credible path towards the 5 percent objective,” he wrote, adding that “a strong transatlantic bond remains essential in an age of global uncertainty”.
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US President Donald Trump has repeatedly demanded that NATO partners significantly boost defence expenditures, as the US administration maintains that European allies should ultimately assume primary responsibility for the conventional defence of the continent.
Trump criticised NATO allies on Thursday, writing in a Truth Social post that NATO countries have done “absolutely nothing” to help with Iran.
“THE U.S.A. NEEDS NOTHING FROM NATO, BUT “NEVER FORGET” THIS VERY IMPORTANT POINT IN TIME!” he wrote.
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In his annual report, Rutte said that last year “all Allies reported defence expenditure figures that met or went beyond the 2 percent target first set in 2014, with many making steep increases in spending.”
NATO leaders agreed at a summit last year to spend 5 percent of GDP on defence and related investments by 2035.
Countries pledged to spend 3.5 percent of GDP on core defence – such as troops and weapons – and 1.5 percent on broader defence-related measures such as cyber security, protecting pipelines and adapting roads and bridges to handle heavy military vehicles.
Three NATO countries – Poland, Lithuania and Latvia – already exceeded the new 3.5 percent target last year, according to the report’s estimates.
Several countries including Spain, Canada and Belgium, were at 2 percent.
In total, the alliance of 32 member countries spent 2.77 percent of GDP on defence in 2025.
The United States accounted for around 60 percent of alliance defence expenditure in 2025.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)