US President Joe Biden marked the 75th anniversary of NATO in remarks from Washington, DC, Tuesday, kicking off this week’s NATO summit by issuing a stark warning of the global stakes if the partners were to walk away from the alliance.
Though the president did not directly address his opponent, former President Donald Trump — who has raised alarms within the alliance by suggesting Russia “do whatever the hell they want” to members who don’t meet defense spending targets — he did tout what he called “an overwhelming bipartisan majority of Americans” who he said “understand that NATO makes us all safer.”
“The fact that both the Democratic and Republican parties are represented here today is a testament to that fact — the American people know all the progress we’ve made in the past 75 years has happened behind the shield of NATO,” he said. “The American people understand what happened if there was no NATO: Another war in Europe, American troops fighting and dying, dictators spreading chaos, economic collapse, catastrophe. Americans, they know we’re stronger with our friends, and we understand, this is a sacred obligation.”
Lawmakers from both parties, including Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons, New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, and others were in the audience for Biden’s remarks.
He rebutted criticisms from Trump and his allies that partner nations don’t meet their defense spending obligation within the alliance, noting, “In the year 2020 — the year I was elected president — only nine NATO allies were spending 2% of their defensive GDP on defense. This year, 23 will spend at least 2%, and some will spend more than that, and the remaining countries that have not yet reached that milestone will get there soon.”