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US committed to NATO, but Europe must spend more on defence: Rubio

Demands members to allocate 5% of GDP
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Marco Rubio
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The United States is as committed to NATO as ever but demands that European allies spend substantially more on defence, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Thursday, while adding that the US would give allies some time to do that.

Rubio spoke as he met fellow NATO foreign ministers gathered in Brussels, with Europeans hoping he would dispel doubts about the US stance even with tensions rising over President Donald Trump’s steep new trade tariffs.

The Trump administration’s words and actions have raised questions about the future of NATO, the transatlantic alliance that has been the bedrock of European security for the past 75 years.

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“The US is in NATO ... The United States is as active in NATO as it has ever been,” Rubio told reporters, dismissing doubts about that commitment as “hysteria”.

Rubio added Trump was “not against NATO. He is against a NATO that does not have the capabilities that it needs to fulfil the obligations that the treaty imposes upon each and every member state.”

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Trump has said the military alliance should spend 5% of gross domestic product on defence — a huge increase from the current 2% goal and a level that no NATO country currently reaches.

Washington has also bluntly told European countries that it can no longer be primarily focused on the continent’s security.

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