NATO allies agree to boost military budgets after Trump pressure

Trump scores foreign policy win as NATO’s 32 nations agree to his 5% GDP defence spending target

(From L) Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, US President Donald Trump, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Netherlands' Prime Minister Dick Schoof attend the North Atlantic Council plenary meeting at the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) summit in The Hague on June 25, 2025. Photo: AFP

US President Donald Trump took a victory lap at NATO's Hague summit Wednesday, joining leaders in reaffirming the "ironclad" commitment to protect each other after allies agreed to his demand to ramp up defence spending.

The unpredictable US leader appeared keen to take the plaudits as he secured a key foreign policy win by getting NATO's 32 countries to agree to meet his headline target of five percent of GDP on defence spending.

In a move that will provide reassurance to allies in Europe worried over the threat from Russia, Trump signed off on a final leaders' declaration confirming "our ironclad commitment" to NATO's collective defence pledge that an attack on one is an attack on all.

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