- Spain rejects NATO’s proposed 5% of GDP spending on defence
- They say its unreasonable
- The 5% target is being pushed by Donald Trump
Spain rejects NATO’s proposed 5% of GDP spending on defence
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has firmly rejected NATO’s push, driven by U.S. President Trump and Secretary-General Mark Rutte, for members to spend 5% of GDP on defence. In a letter to Rutte ahead of next week’s Hague summit, Sánchez warned that such a steep increase would be “unreasonable and counterproductive,” potentially undermining Spain’s welfare model, green transition, and economic growth. Currently, Spain spends around 1.3% of its GDP on defence and plans to reach NATO’s 2% target by year-end; its armed forces estimate optimal national requirements at 2.1%. Sánchez advocates flexibility, opting out or applying a sliding scale, and does not intend to block consensus but asserts Spain’s sovereign right to choose.
🔁 Reactions:
- Government (Pedro Sánchez): “Committing to 5% would be counterproductive; it must reflect each nation’s economic capacity.”
- Opposition (U.S./NATO advocates): “All allies must share the burden; without unity, collective security falters.”
- Viral/Public (European defence analyst): “Spain’s stand may stall the summit, but it surfaces a deeper debate on EU strategic autonomy.”
📰 Bias Snapshot:
- Reuters/AP/Euronews present clear, balanced factual reporting, outlining SPS arguments, current and proposed targets, and summit tensions (ca.news.yahoo.com).
- Financial Times explores the political and fiscal implications, summit leverage, gap between NATO and EU defence goals, and Spain’s domestic pressures (reuters.com).
- Al Jazeera highlights Spain’s objection as a grounding for greater European defence independence and coalition dynamics (aljazeera.com).
📊 Sentiment: Neutral–positive.