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Czech Republic Likely to Miss NATO Defence-Spending Target, PM Tells FT

May 31 (Reuters) – The Czech Republic will “probably” ⁠miss ⁠NATO’s target to boost ⁠military spending to 2% of gross domestic product this ​year, Prime Minister Andrej Babis said in an interview published on ‌Sunday.

“We will do our ‌best” to meet the pledge, Babis told the Financial Times, ⁠but ⁠he said his government was grappling with a budget shortfall ​due to overspending by his pro-EU predecessor.

Czech President Petr Pavel has been at odds with the populist Babis’ government over its plans ​to scale back defence spending in the 2026 budget. Even as ⁠he ⁠signed the budget into ⁠law, ​Pavel warned in March that military outlays were not corresponding to ​growing security threats and ⁠NATO spending commitments.

Babis told the newspaper that Prague was committed to meeting NATO’s new target of 3.5% of GDP by 2035 but that NATO allies should focus more on improving ⁠capabilities than on spending targets, which could be easily manipulated.

The U.S. ⁠plans to tell NATO it will shrink the pool of American military capabilities available to assist the alliance’s European nations in a major crisis, Reuters reported this month.

President Donald Trump has long pressed NATO allies to spend more on their defence, a goal that has become increasingly prominent during Russia’s four-year war against Ukraine.

Pentagon chief Pete ⁠Hegseth told fellow defence ministers at an Asian security conference on Saturday: “The era of the United States subsidising the defence of wealthy nations is over. We need partners, ​not protectorates.”

(Reporting by Anusha Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Kate Mayberry and William Mallard)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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