Rubio Says NATO Members Will Soon Agree To Raise Defense Spending To 5% Of GDP Over Next Decade
- On June 24-25, 2025, NATO members will meet at the summit in The Hague to agree on raising defense spending goals to 5% of GDP over the next decade.
- This agreement follows increasing defense spending since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine and addresses long-standing criticism by President Trump about insufficient allied contributions.
- NATO members have already increased spending to at or above 2%, with several reaching over 4%, and they plan to raise defense budgets by 0.2 percentage points annually to meet the 5% target.
- Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that by the upcoming NATO summit, most member countries will have increased their defense spending to above 4%, and all will have committed to a target of raising it to 5% of their GDP within the next ten years, marking a significant change in how the alliance shares its financial responsibilities.
- If realized, this increase will mark the first time NATO partners contribute more than 50% of alliance defense spending, strengthening deterrence amid evolving threats from Russia and China.
27 Articles
27 Articles
Rubio: NATO Countries Agreed to Increase Defense Spending to Five Percent of GDP
NATO member states have agreed to a goal of increasing defense spending to five percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) over the next decade, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Fox News.
What a Success Story Looks Like: Top U.S. Priorities for the June 2025 NATO Summit in The Hague
President Donald Trump has returned to the Oval Office with a central national security focus: peace through strength. As elsewhere throughout American national security agencies, U.S. European Command (EUCOM) has taken up this charge. Aligned with the President’s guidance, American officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and EUCOM Commander General Christopher Cavoli have underlined the importance …
NATO set to agree on 5% GDP defense spending, Rubio says
"We are headed for a summit in six weeks in which virtually every member of NATO will be at or above 2%, but more importantly, many of them will be over 4% and all will have agreed on a goal of reaching 5% over the next decade," U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 42% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage