Meeting fellow NATO leaders for the first time, U.S.
President Donald Trump aggressively challenged them Thursday to spend more on
their own defense, putting the alliance under exceptional pressure to become
tougher, sharper and newly relevant.
The 27 other leaders looked on in awkward silence as Trump
suggested most NATO countries were freeloaders not paying their share for
military protection. The other leaders are divided over his spending demands,
as well as over how much intelligence to share with Trump’s troubled
administration.
“Twenty-three of the
28 nations are still not paying what they should be paying and what they’re
supposed to be paying for their defense,” Trump said. “This is not fair to the
people and the taxpayers of the United States.”
But the threat of Islamic extremism remained a uniting theme
as the specter of Monday’s Manchester concert bombing loomed over Thursday’s
summit at the alliance’s new headquarters in Brussels.
“That attack shows why it’s important for the international
community and NATO to do more about the fight against terrorism,” British Prime
Minister Theresa May said upon arrival.
NATO’s chief affirmed that the alliance would join the
international coalition fighting the Islamic State group, but will not wage
direct war against the extremists.
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that joining the
U.S.-led anti-Islamic State coalition “will send a strong political message of
NATO’s commitment to the fight against terrorism and also improve our
coordination within the coalition.”
But he underlined that “it does not mean that NATO will
engage in combat operations.”
All 28 NATO allies are individual members of the 68-nation
anti-IS coalition. Some, notably France and Germany, have feared that NATO
officially joining it might upset decision-making within the coalition or
alienate Middle East countries taking part.
Yet NATO leaders are keen to show that the alliance born in
the Cold War is responding to today’s security threats as they meet in
Brussels. Trump has questioned its relevance and pushed members to do more to
defend themselves.
As part of its efforts to respond to Trump’s demand to do
more to fight terrorism, NATO will also set up a counter-terrorism intelligence
cell to improve information-sharing.
It will notably focus on so-called foreign fighters who
travel from Europe to train or fight with extremists in Iraq and Syria.
After a working dinner at Thursday’s summit, the leaders are
also set to announce the appointment of an anti-terror coordinator to oversee
their efforts, and increase the number of flight hours of a surveillance plane
watching the skies over northern Iraq and Syria.
Another big item on the NATO agenda is Trump’s challenge to
other countries to increase their military spending. German Chancellor Angela
Merkel said that NATO leaders will confirm a decision from 2011 increasing the
amount member countries are expected to spend on defense to 2 percent of their
gross domestic product by 2024.
Leaders also will agree to submit annual action plans laying
out how they plan to meet NATO’s spending goal. The plans would also describe
what kind of military equipment they intend to invest in, and how much they are
contributing to NATO operations.
Merkel told reporters she is pleased that NATO spending
plans will also take into account military equipment and contributions to
alliance operations.
To meet the 2 percent guideline, Germany would have to
virtually double its military budget, spending more money on defense than
Russia.
But in remarks that humiliated other leaders, Trump said
that “NATO members must finally contribute their fair share and meet their
financial obligations.” He added, “Many of these nations owe massive amounts of
money from past years.”
Meanwhile a growing row between the U.S. and Britain over
intelligence-sharing clouded the NATO meetings, after leaked photos from the
Manchester bomb scene appeared in The New York Times. Trump has also been
accused of sharing sensitive information supplied by Israel with top Russian
diplomats.
May said that when she sees Trump at the summit she will
stress “that intelligence that is shared between law enforcement agencies must
remain secure.”
The U.S.-British defense and security partnership “is built
on trust. And part of that trust is knowing that intelligence can be shared
confidently.”
NATO chief Stoltenberg, Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte also stressed the importance of
being able to trust allies in fighting extremism.
The NATO summit began with a solemn ceremony inaugurating
two monuments at the new headquarters: one with two sections of the Berlin Wall
that divided the German city until 1989, and another formed from a piece of
World Trade Center 1, a steel beam from the 107th floor of one of the towers
downed by al-Qaida extremists on Sept. 11, 2001.
It’s a reminder of NATO’s commitment to its collective defense
clause — so-called Article 5 — which commits allies to defend any of the 28
members that come under attack. It has only ever been activated once, after
9/11.
(Source: TIME)
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