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The U.S. push for increased defense spending from its Asian allies mirrors the Cold War-era experience of NATO, where U.S.
NATO leaders are expected to agree this week that member countries should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense, except the new and much vaunted investment pledge will not apply to all ...
NATO members have agreed to spend 5% of GDP, they need some principles. These include cutting reliance on the US, integrating ...
NATO leaders are set to agree on a historic defense spending pledge, but the hike won’t apply to all
The head of the NATO military alliance warned Monday that no country could have an opt-out from a massive new hike in ...
AXA Group’s chief economist, Gilles Moëc, explains how insurers have to plan for every eventuality and why he’s quietly ...
The Trump administration’s softened tone on European security, urging Europe to increase military spending while remaining ...
1don MSNOpinion
President Donald Trump's critics scoffed at his idea for NATO allies to pay more for their defense. Now, a new deal is in ...
But at a summit focused on keeping President Trump happy, discussion of Russia is expected to be muted, despite most allies’ ...
South Korea's Defense Ministry said Friday that its defense spending as a share of gross domestic product is already "very high" in response to a call from Washington for allies to increase their ...
Europe’s 5% NATO defence pledge masks widespread accounting tricks, spending inefficiencies, and a growing gap between ambition and capability.
French far right leader Marine Le Pen may have decided to let Prime Minister Francois Bayrou survive this time round, but his ...
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