Broad Support Among NATO Ministers in Brussels for Significant Increase in Defense Spending

NATO ministers broadly support increasing defense spending to 5% of GDP, with a formal decision expected at the upcoming summit in The Hague.

There is broad support within NATO for increasing defense spending to 5% of each member state's gross domestic product (GDP). Secretary-General Rutte made this statement following the meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels. The current NATO standard is 2%, but several countries already fail to meet this.

The formal decision to raise spending to 5% will be made later this month at the NATO summit in The Hague. Rutte will propose that member states allocate 3.5% of their GDP to pure defense spending, prioritizing personnel, air defense, artillery, ammunition, drones, heavy air transport, and logistics.

The remaining 1.5% can also go toward defense-related expenditures, such as infrastructure essential for territorial defense, investments in the defense industry, and preparing society for a wartime situation. Rutte did not provide further details, stating that specifics will be finalized ahead of the summit.

Alice Turner

Alice Turner is an award-winning technology journalist who reshapes conversations around digital accessibility. Her work combines technical insight with personal narrative to amplify underrepresented voices in tech.

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