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Europeans $100 billion short of NATO spending pledge: study
by Staff Writers
Munich, Germany (AFP) Feb 15, 2019

US Pentagon chief said he felt 'welcomed' on European tour
Washington (AFP) Feb 17, 2019 - Acting Pentagon chief Patrick Shanahan on Saturday said he felt "very welcomed" during his trip this week to NATO headquarters in Brussels and a major security conference in Germany.

"My takeaway is that I felt very welcomed and it was a very inclusive environment," Shanahan said, speaking aboard the airplane bringing him home from a three-day international security conference in Munich.

"I was expecting something different. I was expecting them to be a bit more stand-offish," he said, a reference to criticism from allies over President Donald Trump's unilateral decision to pull some 2,000 US troops from Syria.

"The type of dialog and discourse was very frank. I like those types of meetings," he said.

He said that the Pentagon, in coordination with the State Department, will look at the issues raised by Europeans "so we can resolve these constraints and be able to answer a number of the questions... so we can do more planning."

Shanahan on Friday struggled to convince skeptical allies in the international coalition against the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group to help secure Syria once US soldiers pull out.

As the end neared for IS proto-state that once controlled large areas of Iraq and Syria, 13 defense ministers of the anti-IS coalition met on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference.

Shanahan pledged ongoing backing for the fight -- but kept allies guessing as to how that would be achieved once US forces pull out, and won no solid pledges of support.

Shanahan pledged that the US would "maintain our counterterrorism capabilities in the region" and "continue to support our local partners' ability to stand up to the remnants of (IS)" -- but gave no details about how this would be done.

Europe would need to boost defence spending by more than $100 billion to hit the NATO spending pledge that has stirred much anger by US President Donald Trump, a study showed Friday.

The failure of many European allies to get even close to the NATO target of spending two percent of their national output on defence by 2024 has infuriated Trump, who accuses them of freeloading.

Figures from the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) showed that NATO's 27 European countries fell short of the two percent target by $102 billion in 2018.

The IISS's annual "Military Balance" report said European NATO members would "collectively have had to increase their spending by 38 percent" to hit the two percent target in 2018.

Trump's anger over spending has fuelled concern about his commitment to the transatlantic alliance, culminating in an explosive summit last year where he launched a blistering attack public attack on Berlin in a televised meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

US military spending dwarfs that of the rest of the alliance -- in 2018 Washington spent nearly $650 billion on defence, compared with around $250 billion for all the European NATO members combined, according to the IISS report.

NATO expects seven European countries to meet the two percent target when final figures for 2018 are calculated -- up from just three a year earlier.

But while Germany is making efforts to boost military spending, the sheer size of its economy means it is hard to quickly increase the percentage relative to its hefty gross domestic product (GDP).

To hit the two percent target, analysts say Berlin would need to vastly raise its defence expenditure between 2017 and 2024 -- a problematic undertaking in any country, let alone one with Germany's post-war history of unease about military strength.

The increase in US spending alone from 2017 to 2018 -- around $45 billion -- almost equalled the entire German defence budget, the report noted.


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