terça-feira, 28 de fevereiro de 2017
TEc - Military spending by NATO members - The US has a point
A very relevant article that presents a stark picture providing enough food for thought.
Even if comparisons should need some detail to make them more representative, there is no denying that the US remains by far the dominant force within NATO on all counts. If a fairly modest set target of 2% of GDP has not been taken seriously by most member-countries after nearly a decade, then the US is fully entitled to call everyone's attention to listen up.
Among the other major economies of the West - Canada, Germany, Italy, Spain and France - the level of spending ranges from ridiculous to barely survival mode. Whatever reasons led successive governments to play down the military and scale back their budgets, the time is overly ripe for a policy and attitude reversal.
Germany's case (and Canada's in North America) is especially striking.
That a major country/biggest European economy whose coffers have been overflowing since long, should make a smaller effort than minor countries with dire public finances is utterly unacceptable.
Indeed, only the US still has the leverage to press German leadership to step up to the plate and do their share.
Even if comparisons should need some detail to make them more representative, there is no denying that the US remains by far the dominant force within NATO on all counts. If a fairly modest set target of 2% of GDP has not been taken seriously by most member-countries after nearly a decade, then the US is fully entitled to call everyone's attention to listen up.
Among the other major economies of the West - Canada, Germany, Italy, Spain and France - the level of spending ranges from ridiculous to barely survival mode. Whatever reasons led successive governments to play down the military and scale back their budgets, the time is overly ripe for a policy and attitude reversal.
Germany's case (and Canada's in North America) is especially striking.
That a major country/biggest European economy whose coffers have been overflowing since long, should make a smaller effort than minor countries with dire public finances is utterly unacceptable.
Indeed, only the US still has the leverage to press German leadership to step up to the plate and do their share.
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