NATO must spend 5% of GDP on defence by 2030, Poland says


FILE PHOTO: A NATO flag flutters at the Tapa military base, Estonia April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins/File Photo

WARSAW, May 6 (Reuters) - ⁠NATO countries need to hit the alliance's target ⁠of spending 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) on ‌defence five years ahead of schedule in 2030, Poland's defence minister said on Wednesday, as he warned of the risks of ​being too late in rearming.

• An ⁠eastern member of NATO ⁠that borders both Russia and Ukraine, Poland has been ⁠ramping ‌up its military spending in the face of what it regards as the rising ⁠threat from Moscow.

• Warsaw is NATO's biggest ​military spender relative ‌to the size of its economy and plans ⁠to spend ​4.8% of GDP on defence in 2026.

• "Europe is capable of developing its economic potential on an unimaginable scale, ⁠but we must be clear: this ​is today's priority," Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz told the Defence 24 Days conference in Warsaw.

• "There's no point in waiting until 2035 ⁠for 5% - it must be achieved by 2030, because later may be too late," he said.

• At a summit in June 2025 NATO leaders agreed to ​spend 5% of GDP on ⁠defence and security-related investments by 2035.

• This includes items ​such as cybersecurity and upgrading roads ‌and ports to handle heavy ​military equipment.

(Reporting by Karol Badohal, Pawel Florkiewicz, writing by Alan Charlish, editing by Alexandra Hudson)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Vespa riders take to roads in Rome to mark 80th birthday
Trump's Iran deal falls short for these voters and some fear it could cost Republicans the midterm
Ukraine hits defence plant in Russia's Volgograd region, Zelenskiy says
Catholic bishops call for humane treatment of migrants during US-Mexico border Mass
Small aircraft crash in Beijing kills one person, injures 13, local govt says
French city-dwellers swap stifling apartments for cool hotel rooms
Explosive drone targets Iranian Kurdish opposition camp north of Iraq's Erbil, security sources say
Iran says it struck US-linked targets in response to US attacks
Germany gripped by record temperatures as European heatwave moves east
Thousands left without power after wild weather in New Zealand

Others Also Read