President Donald Trump speaks throughout a media convention on the finish of the NATO summit as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, proper, and Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth pay attention in The Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025.
Alex Brandon/AP
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Alex Brandon/AP
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump acquired what he wished from NATO finally yr’s summit: an alliance whose members had largely acceded to his calls for to step up their protection spending.
This week when he meets leaders in Turkey, his mission is to implement that pledge.
The velocity with which most NATO international locations have tried to heed Trump’s name to spend 5% of their annual gross home product on protection over the subsequent decade underscores how the U.S. president has reshaped the alliance and bent it to his will — whilst he continues to spar with its members over the Iran conflict, his flirtation with annexing Greenland, and numerous private tiffs.
“President Trump fully expects that all allies will step up immediately and get on the path to 5% and do it with urgency,” Matt Whitaker, the U.S. ambassador to NATO, informed reporters in a preview of the administration’s message earlier than this week’s summit in Ankara.
Trump leaves Monday night for the summit, and for days main as much as the journey has been airing grievances about how a lot the U.S. spends on protection in contrast with different international locations. That is regardless of efforts from Mark Rutte, the alliance’s secretary-general, who tried to feed the ego of the tempestuous U.S. chief in an Oval Workplace assembly final month. There, he displayed massive charts on easels displaying what he known as ” The Trump Trillion ” — how a lot allies had boosted their spending commitments since 2017.
Luke Coffey, senior fellow on the Hudson Institute, a conservative assume thank in Washington, described the Ankara gathering because the “first report card” after final yr’s summit in The Hague.
“If NATO members play their cards right — if the leaders show up demonstrating a commitment and a reasonable plan to meet these spending targets — then it’ll allow President Trump to take a victory lap,” Coffey mentioned.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attends the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, Tuesday, June 16, 2026.
Vadim Ghirda/AP
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Vadim Ghirda/AP
Trump will meet with Ukraine’s Zelenskyy
Trump left final month’s G7 summit in France buoyed by help from his counterparts for his interim settlement to finish the conflict with Iran. He praised unity amongst leaders — who additionally labored to carry Trump onside to spice up safety help for Ukraine in its battle with Russia.
That conflict, now in its fifth yr, is predicted to be a key focus on the Ankara summit. The White Home mentioned Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday. Trump spoke with each Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 4.
Trump additionally plans to satisfy on the sidelines of the summit with Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa. The White Home has not supplied objectives for that dialogue, nevertheless it comes as Trump has publicly mused about Syria taking part in an even bigger position combating Hezbollah in Lebanon. Al-Sharaa, who led an Islamic rebel group and whose insurgent forces ousted former Syrian President Bashar Assad, has mentioned he has no real interest in doing so.
The U.S. president additionally plans a separate assembly with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the host of the summit whom Trump counts as an in depth pal.
However he has no bilateral conferences deliberate with different leaders. Regardless of the optimistic tone of the G7 summit, Trump resurrected feuds as quickly as he returned stateside.
He proclaimed that Keir Starmer would resign as British prime minister earlier than the embattled chief made it official, arguing that Starmer “failed badly” on immigration and power. In the meantime, Trump asserted that Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had begged him for a photograph, prompting a ferocious denial by her and the cancellation of a U.S. go to by the nation’s international minister.
Regardless of the fallout, Trump egged it on additional on Sunday when he posted a photograph on social media of Meloni smiling at him, together with the phrases “RESTRAINING ORDER NEEDED.”
Trump has remained on tense phrases with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, and whereas French President Emmanuel Macron charmed Trump with a lavish dinner on the Palace of Versailles final month, it hasn’t all the time been clean between the 2 leaders.
Conscious of these tensions, a bipartisan group of senators is once more headed to the summit this yr, attempting to characterize the broad help for the alliance on Capitol Hill and to function a counterweight to Trump’s usually caustic angle towards NATO.
“They are our best allies, they are our best trading partners, they are critical to our national security, to our economic success, and we need to encourage those relationships,” mentioned Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., who’s main the delegation to Ankara. “That’s part of what Congress understands that the administration doesn’t seem to.”
NATO Secretary Normal Mark Rutte speaks throughout a gathering with President Donald Trump within the Oval Workplace on the White Home, Wednesday, June 24, 2026, in Washington.
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
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Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Trump’s workforce is making the case for extra NATO adjustments
The summit comes as Trump’s administration makes the case for what it calls “NATO 3.0,” which envisions an alliance that has Europe taking up extra of its safety wants, permitting the U.S. to shift its focus elsewhere.
The technique was outlined by Elbridge Colby, a U.S. undersecretary of protection, earlier this yr at a gathering of NATO protection ministers.
Then, in a scathing speech to different NATO protection ministers final month, Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth added to the stress by asserting that the U.S. will conduct a six-month evaluation of its forces in Europe. This shocked international locations within the alliance that had anticipated coordinating with the Trump administration by means of the transition.
Trump himself sparked a lot confusion earlier this yr when he appeared to ship conflicting alerts on the difficulty, asserting that he would ship 5,000 U.S. troops to Poland weeks after ordering the identical variety of forces pulled out of the continent.
Shaheen mentioned the NATO 3.0 idea “fails to understand — as this administration has consistently failed to understand — the threat that Putin and Russia are to Europe and subsequently to the United States.”
FILE – On this picture launched by Syrian Presidency press workplace, President Donald Trump, left, shakes fingers with Syria’s President Ahmad al-Sharaa, on the White Home in Washington, Monday, Nov. 10, 2025.
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Europe is boosting spending, however nonetheless counts on the U.S.
The U.S. president final yr was the driving consider a broad goal reached in The Hague for NATO international locations to spend 5% of their GDP on protection over the subsequent decade.
Of that, 3.5% can be for core protection spending and the remainder can be associated bills, comparable to infrastructure. Spain mentioned on the time that it could not meet these ranges, and a few others have voiced reservations in regards to the bold objective.
Regardless of the elevated pledges and spending, specialists say many components of the continent are nonetheless reliant on the U.S. for his or her protection ought to they arrive below assault. The defining characteristic of the NATO alliance is the view that an armed assault on one member is an assault on all.
“This is the reality for most Europeans,” mentioned Liana Repair, senior fellow for Europe on the Council on Overseas Relations. She mentioned most are removed from having the ability to defend themselves with out the USA, “even if they’re starting to develop all that.”
Aside from the spending pledge, NATO has labored to accommodate Trump in different methods.
The alliance earlier this yr launched “Arctic Sentry,” a NATO-led army train aimed toward countering Russian and Chinese language actions within the area. It is also meant to deal with Trump’s repeated threats to grab Greenland, for the reason that Republican president has insisted the U.S. wants to amass the semiautonomous territory of Denmark for strategic safety causes.

