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Trump labels NATO ‘obsolete’ in newspaper interview

FRANKFURT AM MAIN — The NATO alliance is an “obsolete” organisation, US President-elect Donald Trump said in an interview published late Sunday (Jan 15), complaining that the pact had “not bothered about terrorism”.

Donald Trump. New York Times file photo

Donald Trump. New York Times file photo

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN — The NATO alliance is an “obsolete” organisation, US President-elect Donald Trump said in an interview published late Sunday (Jan 15), complaining that the pact had “not bothered about terrorism”.

“I said a long time ago that NATO had problems. Number one it was obsolete, because it was designed many, many years ago,” Mr Trump told the Monday editions of German tabloid Bild and the Times of London.

While he said NATO remains “very important to me”, he returned to a favourite campaign-trail complaint that some NATO allies weren’t paying enough.

“We’re supposed to protect countries. But a lot of these countries aren’t paying what they’re supposed to be paying, which I think is very unfair to the United States.

“With that being said, NATO is very important to me. There’s five countries that are paying what they’re supposed to. Five. It’s not much,” he added.

The US accounts for some 70 per cent of spending by NATO nations.

Immediately after Mr Trump’s election victory, the organisation’s secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg recalled that NATO had been at the heart of transatlantic security since its founding in 1949.

Members of NATO are pledged to defend one another if attacked, with the self-defence clause invoked only once in history — after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States.

In 2014, leaders of the 22-nation alliance — originally founded in response to the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe — agreed to return defence spending to their commitment of 2.0 per cent of GDP in the wake of Russian intervention in Ukraine and upheavals in the Middle East and North Africa. AFP

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