Site icon

NATO Must Spend 5% of GDP on Defence by 2030, Poland Says

WARSAW, May 6 (Reuters) – NATO countries ⁠need ⁠to hit the ⁠alliance’s target of spending 5% of gross ​domestic product (GDP) on defence five years ahead of schedule ‌in 2030, Poland’s defence ‌minister said on Wednesday, as he warned ⁠of ⁠the risks of being too late in rearming.

• An ​eastern member of NATO that borders both Russia and Ukraine, Poland has been ramping up its military ​spending in the face of what it regards as ⁠the rising ⁠threat from Moscow.

• ⁠Warsaw ​is NATO’s biggest military spender relative to the size of ​its economy ⁠and plans to spend 4.8% of GDP on defence in 2026.

• “Europe is capable of developing its economic potential on an unimaginable scale, but we ⁠must be clear: this is today’s priority,” Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz told ⁠the Defence 24 Days conference in Warsaw.

• “There’s no point in waiting until 2035 for 5% – it must be achieved by 2030, because later may be too late,” he said.

• At a summit in June 2025 NATO leaders agreed to spend 5% of GDP on defence ⁠and security-related investments by 2035.

• This includes items such as cybersecurity and upgrading roads and ports to handle heavy military equipment.

(Reporting by Karol ​Badohal, Pawel Florkiewicz, writing by Alan Charlish, ​editing by Alexandra Hudson)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – April 2026

Exit mobile version