Russia-wary U.S. to press NATO allies to hike military spending – official
WASHINGTON – The United States will press NATO allies, especially Germany, to increase military spending while underscoring the heightened threat from Russia, a senior State Department official said on Wednesday before Friday’s meeting of the alliance in Brussels.
Asked whether U.S. Secretary of State nominee, Mike Pompeo, would attend the meeting if he was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Thursday, the official said, “We are following this closely, but don’t have anything to announce on that right now.”
As of now, Acting Secretary of State John Sullivan will attend the meeting of NATO foreign ministers, the official said.
The meeting is a preview to a July summit of leaders from countries belonging to NATO, an organisation founded on collective defence against the Soviet threat.
“The Russian government has demonstrated its ability to threaten, coerce, undermine and even invade its neighbours,” the official said, emphasizing that Moscow was a “destabilising factor” in Ukraine, Georgia and Syria.
The official said six NATO member countries had submitted spending plans to meet a target of 2 percent of economic output on defence every year by 2024.
“It is time for the other 13 members of the alliance to step up, and especially Germany, NATO largest and wealthiest European member state of NATO,” the official said.
The official said the issue was likely to be raised during a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Washington this week.
The issue of low defence spending in Europe has long been an irritant in the United States, whose new national defence strategy centres on countering Russia after more than a decade of focussing on Islamist militants.
Some Europeans say focussing on the 2 percent figure is misleading as it does not take into account how money is spent.
Source: reuters
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