Brussels, July 12 (IANS/AKI) Italy's government has not agreed to an increase in military spending, Premier Giuseppe Conte said after a Nato summit here on Thursday.
"We have not altered our spending commitments. We have not offered to up our contribution from what we have budgeted for," he said at a press conference here, contradicting claims by US President Donald Trump to have convinced Nato allies at the summit to "substantially" raise their defence budgets.
Reports suggested Trump had threatened to go it alone if other nations did not meet the alliance's target of 2 percent of GDP by 2024, agreed by its members at a Nato summit in Wales four years ago.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron also made it clear on Thursday they had not signed up to anything more than what was agreed in 2014.
Macron added that he was unconvinced by Trump's proposal that Nato members ultimately increase their military spending to 4 percent of GDP.
Italy spent 1.12 percent of its GDP on defence in 2017, while Germany spent 1.24 percent. France 1.79 percent and the US 3.57 percent according to Nato.
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