NATO, Pentagon Chiefs Discuss Military Budgets, Terrorism

NATO, Pentagon Chiefs Discuss Military Budgets, Terrorism
Gen. James Mattis, the head of U.S. Central Command, takes questions after delivering a lecture to the London think tank Policy Exchange on Feb. 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
The Associated Press
1/24/2017
Updated:
1/24/2017

BRUSSELS—NATO’s chief and new U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis have discussed military spending and combating terrorism, the source of criticism of the alliance by President Donald Trump.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg’s office said Tuesday that the two men “agreed on the fundamental and enduring value of NATO for the security of both Europe and North America.”

In a phone call, they looked forward “to working together to strengthen the alliance, including by increasing defense spending and doing even more to fight terrorism.”

Trump has said in the past that NATO is “obsolete” and has upset allies by suggesting he might refuse to defend those not spending 2 percent of their GDP on military budgets.

The U.S. spends more on its armed forces than the other 27 NATO member states combined. It also pays a significant portion—just over 22 percent—of NATO’s commonly funded budget.

Stoltenberg and previous secretaries general have been urging allies to step up spending for years.

Only four other countries—Britain, Estonia, Greece and Poland—meet the 2 percent spending target. Many are increasing their budgets, mostly in response to aggressive action by Russia, like its military ventures in Ukraine and Georgia, unannounced war games and the buzzing of allied ships and planes by Russian jet fighters.

Trump has also said that NATO must do more to combat terrorism, though allies did deploy thousands of soldiers to Afghanistan in response to the Sept. 11 attacks.

Last week, a top NATO general conceded that parts of the world’s biggest military alliance are obsolete.

Supreme Allied Commander Transformation Gen. Denis Mercier said NATO has focused too much on deploying troops abroad, so-called expeditionary warfare, particularly its Afghan operation.

Mercier said NATO wants to revamp its approach to counter-terrorism, in part by helping countries under threat to develop long-term plans to fight extremists.

Mattis was sworn in Friday. He will meet his NATO counterparts and Stoltenberg on Feb. 15-16 in Brussels.

Epoch Times contributed to this report.