The United States Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, has told NATO’s defence ministers that some allies still need to do more even as Washington pours record sums into its own military, in remarks alongside the Secretary General that cast the alliance as entering a harder-edged new era.
Speaking at the start of what he called the last big meeting before next month’s summit in Ankara, the Secretary General Mark Rutte welcomed Hegseth and declared that “NATO 3.0 is really happening”, the shorthand both men used for a stronger Europe and a stronger alliance, with Ankara set to be, in Rutte’s words, all about implementation.
Rutte credited a speech Hegseth had given on his first NATO visit in February 2025, in which the American had pressed allies to spend more, raise production and strike a fair deal with the United States, and said Europeans had now responded, pointing to what he described as over 90 billion dollars in additional defence spending across Europe and Canada in 2025, an increase of almost 20 per cent. The alliance had to keep producing more on both sides of the Atlantic, Rutte said, in order to out-build China, Russia and others rapidly expanding their own defence output.
Hegseth returned the praise, crediting Rutte with leading the way in partnership with President Donald Trump, and described NATO 3.0 as a recognition that the alliance needed to return to being “a real hard line military alliance” with the capabilities to deter on the continent and to take the lead for the conventional defence of Europe, a shift he said European nations were now making.
While many countries were following through on the commitments made at last year’s Hague summit, Hegseth said, some still needed to do more, and he made clear he would say so plainly, telling reporters the United States would “be candid about that, both in private and in public” in the spirit of “friends being honest with friends”, a message he said he would deliver in his meetings through the day.
Hegseth was equally keen to stress what the United States was doing, describing a planned 1.5 trillion dollar defence investment in the 2027 financial year as “a message to the world”, and saying he would spend weeks on Capitol Hill making the case for the spending through the budget process. The aim, he said, was to build what he called “the arsenal of freedom”, one that first and foremost protected America and its interests but also backstopped the strength of NATO and its allies.
The remarks set the tone for a defence ministerial that comes at a pivotal moment for the alliance, with the United States having told allies it will commit fewer guaranteed forces to NATO’s force model and asked European members and Canada to take up the slack, and with senior officials warning that an increasingly reckless Russia is testing NATO’s airspace from the Baltic to the High North, all of it feeding into the agenda for Ankara.











As usual america has got the right to call out europe for its abysmal defence spending record and even nations that still fail to commit to spending targets (glances at Spain)
If anything its Trumps threats for the USA to leave NATO that convinced Europe to start spending more on defence back during his first term and Russia invading Ukraine finally convinced the king laggard Germany to take its own defence seriously
So unironically I thank Trump and Russia for their service in frightening the eurotrash into action 👏
Probably his most positive result across the board, to be fair!
He could probably do with firing some more harsh words at Starmer on defence, see if we can’t hash this DIP out properly…
Clunker, are you American? I guess your definition of eurotrash is any ENATO country that is not meeting 2% and/or is showing little inclination to go onto spend more than that?
Well if you go round starting wars and threaten to invade NATO countries I suppose your defence spending will need to increase to pay for munitions used and stuff you ‘might’ want to use!
Sorry Pete, you don’t have $1.5 trillion to spend in 2027.
You’re in debt up to your eyeballs pal and you just lost your second war in five years.
Strongly suggest you wind in your neck and mind your own bees wax sir.
You were elected on a platform of no more forever wars.
In all fairness to Pete, they weren’t forever wars. They lost them quite quickly!
Nice to know that Trump’s “no more wars, we’re going to spend that money on Americans” plan is all coming together and they’re not needing to put record spending into defence next year…!