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Pete Hegseth hails defense progress by NATO allies

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth praised NATO allies' progress in meeting defense spending commitments, while noting that some nations still need to do more. The comments were made ahead of meetings with NATO defense ministers in Brussels. NATO aims to demonstrate increased European defense spending to reassure U.S. President Donald Trump before a summit in Ankara. A NATO official noted that three European countries, including Slovenia and the Czech Republic, may fail to meet the 2% GDP defense spending target this year.

Pete Hegseth hails defense progress by NATO allies

BRUSSELS

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday hailed progress by NATO allies to meet defense spending vows, but said some must “do more,” as he struck a conciliatory tone at an alliance meeting.

“Many countries following through, some that still need to do more, and we will be candid about that, both in private and in public,” Hegseth said ahead of talks with NATO defense ministers in Brussels.

“I think that’s important, friends being honest with friends.”

The warm tone will likely reassure Washington’s allies ahead of a summit next month in Ankara with U.S. President Donald Trump, after the mercurial leader lashed out at Europe over its response to his war on Iran.

NATO will look to showcase increased expenditure by Europe to prove to Trump it is progressing on a pledge last year to reach five percent of GDP on defense-related spending.

“When it comes to spending, what we are seeing is staggering amounts of money coming in,” NATO chief Mark Rutte said.

“Europe and Canada spending in 2025 more than $90 billion extra compared to 2024, which is almost a 20 percent increase in defense spending.”

Despite the positive spin from the alliance, a NATO official said that three European countries, including Slovenia and the Czech Republic, are currently on course to fall short of a crucial 2 percent threshold this year.

Washington has been clear with Europe that it wants NATO allies on the continent to take over primary responsibility for their own conventional defense as U.S. focus shifts towards China.

As part of that process the Pentagon has told allies it is reducing the number of assets worldwide that it makes available to NATO.

The U.S. move has sparked fear it could leave Europe vulnerable in the face of an aggressive Russia as allies still rely on Washington for some key weaponry.

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Read the full article at Hurriyet Daily News
Source document: U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth

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Hurriyet Daily NewsParty-alignedCenter3 days ago
Pete Hegseth hails defense progress by NATO allies

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth praised NATO allies' progress in meeting defense spending commitments, while noting that some nations still need to do more. The comments were made ahead of meetings with NATO defense ministers in Brussels. NATO aims to demonstrate increased European defense spending to reassure U.S. President Donald Trump before a summit in Ankara. A NATO official noted that three European countries, including Slovenia and the Czech Republic, may fail to meet the 2% GDP defense spending target this year.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced view of the situation, highlighting both the progress made by NATO allies in increasing defense spending and the concerns regarding certain countries falling short of targets. It includes direct quotes from Pete Hegseth and a NATO official without apparent bias toward

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  • government U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
  • government NATO chief Mark Rutte

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  • governmentU.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
  • governmentNATO chief Mark Rutte