Spain's PM Pedro Sánchez Rejects NATO's 5% of GDP Spending Plan as ...
36 Articles
36 Articles
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez claims that his country is not obliged to spend the five percent of NATO-agreed GDP on defense. He points to the final document. Trump's threats to a trade dispute leave him unimpressed. And perhaps he is also pleased about it.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez confirmed Wednesday, at the end of the Hague NATO summit, that Spain will not allocate more than 2.1% of GDP to the defence, although the other Member States agreed to increase this budget to 5% of GDP in a ten-year horizon, reports Reuters.
On the table the ways to achieve by 2035 the increase in military expenditure demanded by Washington
The differences between the defense budget objectives between the alliance's partners and Sánchez have generated some discrepancies.
Pedro Sánchez takes great care of his international profile. His mastery of English also allows him to interact with the majority of leaders. At each summit it is common...
NATO leaders are meeting this Wednesday in The Hague for a summit with the path of investment in defense for the next decade as the only issue, and in which all countries are expected to commit themselves to the new 5% of GDP spending bar, demanded by the President of the United States, Donald Trump, despite the opposition of the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, who calls for compliance with the military requirements of the Alliance w…
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