Spain Says No to NATO’s 5%‑GDP Chill Out:
In a move that’s turned heads, Spain has officially rebuffed NATO’s push for the EU’s 5% of GDP defence spend target. At last week’s summit in The Hague, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez sent a crisp letter to Secretary‑General Mark Rutte, telling the NATO chiefs that Spain can’t set a hard 5% toll on its economy.
Why the Red‑Flag
- “Unreasonable, even counter‑productive”, Sánchez warned—sliding a 5% target would push Spain off its “optimal” budget path and run contrary to the EU’s security‑mesh plans.
- Spain already spends under 2% of GDP on defence, with a 10 billion‑euro lift this year still falling short of the 2% line.
- Other NATO allies? They’re all in. They’ve pledged the 5% punchline; Spain is standing on its own fiscal guns.
Trump’s Side‑Chatter (Without the Baggage)
“Spain will pay twice,” Trump joked in a light‑hearted spin, later clarifying that he was just spinning the yarn of a trade deal negotiation. It’s a headline‑catcher, but the real story is Spain’s stand‑alone defence ethic.
Takeaway
Spain is carving its own defence path. Rather than lock into a percentage that’s hard to swallow, the country is opting to balance its spending with its own priorities, even if that means sprinting a bit faster towards its 2% goal.
Stay Tuned!
Keep an eye on how NATO’s alliance powers adapt—there’s more defence drama on the horizon.
