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Pedro Sánchez Torpedoes Nato Unity on Eve of Crucial Summit

Summary by Financial Times
Leaders risk getting into shouting match with Donald Trump over increased defence spending

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The president, who even sounded as a possible candidate for the organization’s Secretary General, sees three years after the successful Madrid Summit how the relationship with the Atlantic Alliance is strained

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The prestigious British daily dedicates an editorial to the president of the government where he emphasizes that his opposition to increasing spending on Defense is a...

Pedro Sánchez has once again demonstrated that his relationship with the truth is tenuous, to say the least. This Sunday, in a phantom appearance convened unexpectedly from La Moncloa Palace, the president claimed a personal victory over NATO: Spain would not have to increase its defense spending beyond 2.1% of GDP. According to Sánchez, he had managed to twist the Atlantic Alliance's arm, defending the welfare state with an audacity that only h…

Poland and Belgium call the Spanish exception proposed by Sánchez "unjustified". "Look for a conflict to strengthen their internal image," says the FT. More information: NATO ensures that Spain will have to spend 3.5% of GDP to meet its current commitments to the alliance.

·Spain
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Trump warned the institution that, if the pact is not fulfilled, it could lose U.S. security guarantees

·Madrid, Spain
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Financial Times broke the news in London, United Kingdom on Monday, June 23, 2025.
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