NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed the increase in military spending by Alliance countries on Wednesday February 14, a few days after harsh criticism from Donald Trump on bad payers in Europe.

Long demanded by the United States, this increase was thunderously recalled last week by the former American president and likely Republican candidate in the November election.

“We should not weaken the credibility of NATO’s deterrence,” Jens Stoltenberg warned the press on Wednesday, after condemning comments over the weekend that “undermine our security.”

“We must leave no room for possible miscalculations or misunderstandings in Moscow regarding our degree of preparation, our commitment and our determination to protect the Allies,” he asserted.

Also read: With Steadfast Defender 2024, NATO imagines the worst-case scenario with Russia

The secretary general of the organization also highlighted the efforts made by the European Allies over the past ten years.

Eighteen out of 31 NATO countries will reach the target of 2% of GDP in military spending this year, he told a conference ahead of a meeting of alliance defense ministers in Brussels .

“This is another record number,” he stressed, adding that only three countries had reached this 2% target in 2014. “We are making real progress, European Allies are spending more,” he said. He insists. And there will be eleven in 2023, according to an estimate published by NATO.

"You must pay"

However, he immediately stressed, "some Allies still have a long way to go."

NATO has not disclosed the list of countries that have reached the 2% target, but Germany has indicated that it will be part of it this year and France next year.

The United States nonetheless remains, by far, the largest contributor to the NATO budget.

“We agreed at the summit (in Vilnius, Lithuania) that all Allies should invest 2% and that this 2% was a minimum,” recalled Jens Stoltenberg.

Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 helped encourage Europeans to invest more in their defenses. And since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the 2% threshold has become a floor and no longer a spending ceiling.

Which didn't stop Donald Trump from taking credit for it. The latter thus affirmed that he had made the Alliance “strong” under his mandate (2017-2021).

"When I told the 20 countries that weren't paying their fair share that they had to pay or they wouldn't benefit from American protection, the money flowed in," he said. “But now that I'm no longer here to say 'you have to pay', they're doing it again!”

If his attacks against bad payers within the Alliance are not new, his comments encouraging Russia to attack one of them shocked.

“It’s a change of scale, an alignment with Russia which is dangerous,” underlined a NATO diplomat.

However, these comments above all show the need for Europeans – 29 out of 31 countries within NATO – to “take their responsibilities in matters of defense”, added this diplomat.

And this responsibility also passes through Ukraine, another issue of this ministerial meeting. A meeting of countries supporting the Ukrainian war effort is planned for Wednesday on the sidelines of the ministerial meeting, in the absence of US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, and while US aid of more than $60 million for of Kiev is still blocked in Congress due to a veto by Trumpist Republican elected officials.

With AFP

The France 24 summary of the week

invites you to look back at the news that marked the week

I subscribe

Take international news everywhere with you! Download the France 24 application