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Spain is not the only sceptic among NATO’s ranks. Slovakia, while less vocal, has also expressed ambiguity towards the 5% ...
Spain was the only NATO ally not to commit to a large increase in military expenditures. It’s far from Russia, and its ...
NATO's commitment to spend five percent of GDP on defense by 2035 was meant to unify the alliance, but it's revealing ...
El Mundo on MSN8d
Spain defends the Northern border of NATO for the first time with six fighter jets in IcelandThe mission will monitor aircraft operating without a flight plan for a month. A total of 44 airmen from the Spanish Air and ...
As Nato leaders meet to agree big increases in targets for defence spending, some of them haven't yet met the existing ones.
NATO members recently agreed to increase defense spending to 5% by 2035 — a "quantum leap," according to the military alliance's chief, Mark Rutte. But can its indebted members really afford the hike?
Basking in admiration, the president took a victory lap over new spending commitments, while defending U.S. strikes on Iran.
Spain agreed with the NATO military alliance to be excluded from spending 5% of its gross domestic product on defence, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Sunday.
But Spain remains a rare holdout, angering U.S. President Donald Trump, who has painted the policy as a personal win.
Spain was NATO's lowest spender last year, according to the alliance's estimates, spending around 1.28% of its GDP on defense expenditure.
NATO leaders are expected to agree by Wednesday that member countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense ...
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