Trump is unhappy with European NATO members’ defence spending (MANDEL NGAN)

Berlin (AFP) – German defence spending will rise next year but then drop off again as a percentage of GDP, Berlin said Monday, in news expected to anger US President Donald Trump.

Trump has repeatedly attacked Germany and other NATO allies for falling far short of meeting the target of spending two percent of gross domestic product on their militaries, accusing them of freeloading on US military might.

Germany’s finance ministry on Monday presented its budget planning for coming years.

It said that defence spending would reach 1.37 percent of GDP in 2020.

But it would then drop off to 1.29 percent by 2022, and to 1.25 percent by 2023.

Though NATO countries have only promised to try to hit two percent by 2024, the failure of many to even get close to that has infuriated Trump, who has reportedly threatened to pull out of the alliance if the European allies does not boost spending immediately.

Germany, Europe’s economic powerhouse, has come in for particular criticism from the United States, whose military spending dwarfs that of the rest of the alliance. 

In 2018 Washington spent nearly $700 billion on defence, compared with just $280 billion for all the European NATO allies combined.

While German defence spending went up from $45 billion to $50 billion last year, the country’s growing economy meant the figure relative to its GDP stayed flat at 1.23 percent.

Figures released this month showed that just seven of the 29 NATO countries hit the alliance’s defence spending target in 2018.

Apart from the US, six members hit the two percent target in 2018: Britain, Estonia, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg last week welcomed Berlin’s moves to increase its budget so far but stressed that “I expect further increases”.

Trump’s regular outbursts about European defence expenditure have caused some to question the future of the alliance, which celebrates its 70th anniversary this year.

After the end of the Cold War military budgets in Europe steadily dwindled, but Russia’s annexation of Crimea and growing assertiveness have made defence a priority once more.

Last month a report by 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 said European NATO members would “collectively have had to increase their spending by 38 percent” to hit the two percent target in 2018.

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