Spain's rejected NATO's 2025 mandate for all member countries to raise defense expenditures to 5% of GDP by 2035. Spain, led by Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez, has insisted it will cap its defense budget at 2.1% of GDP, citing fiscal and social spending concerns. This stance triggered friction with the
United States, a NATO member and world's largest weapons exporter, with the latter's leader,
Donald Trump, threatening that his country will be paid back by Spain through tariffs instead. Analysts point out that Spain tends to spend more on defense than is budgeted through extraordinary contributions, sometimes exceeding the official budget by 20% to 30%. Spain formally requested to be exempt from the 5% target. Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez, in a letter to NATO Secretary General
Mark Rutte, described the 5% goal as "unreasonable and counterproductive". He also stated that, in order for Spain to reach the capabilities targets agreed on 5 June 2025, the
Spanish Armed Forces had estimated a 2.1% GDP spending. Spain subsequently agreed to be excluded from the 5% requirement in the final summit text, although the declaration still stipulates the 2035 timeline and 2029 review date. Mark Rutte, while recognizing Spain's domestic concerns, emphasized that all allies are expected to increase defense investment. He described Spain's stance as "flexible exemption" but cautioned that exceptions should not undermine collective resolve. U.S. President
Donald Trump criticized Spain's position, labeling it "very terrible" and threatened that "Spain will pay double" in future trade negotiations. Spain's stance, along with concerns voiced by Italy, Belgium, and Slovakia, led to intense internal negotiations. NATO diplomats reframed key summit language—from "we commit" to "allies commit"—to accommodate dissent while preserving the integrity of the agreement. Spain's challenge highlights a growing tension in NATO between national fiscal priorities and unified security commitments. While Eastern European nations and the UK broadly support the 5% escalation, Spain argues that its defense capabilities—backed by personnel, deployments, and industry—are achievable without a fixed GDP percentage. This dispute has also underscored deeper EU–NATO dynamics: Spain pointed to its broader European defense strategy, suggesting that the EU's consolidated defense investment frameworks should be prioritized over unilateral NATO spending mandates. == See also ==