NATO summit in Ankara: from 5% pledges to paying the bill
Leaders of the 32 allies meet on 7-8 July in Ankara. On the table: enforcing the spending targets, defence industry capacity and €70 billion for Ukraine.
The 2026 NATO summit opens on Tuesday 7 July in Ankara, and this time the theme is not promising — it is delivering. A year after allies committed in The Hague to reach 5% of GDP in defence-related spending by 2035, the 32 leaders, Donald Trump included, will be measuring who is actually paying the bill.
What is at stake at the NATO summit?
Three files dominate the agenda set by Secretary General Mark Rutte: increasing defence investment, boosting transatlantic industrial production and supporting Ukraine — with allies preparing to pledge €70 billion in military aid for 2026 and “at least equivalent” levels for 2027. The final declaration is expected to reaffirm an “ironclad commitment” to collective defence, a phrase worth more than usual this year: tensions with Washington, from the fallout over Iran to the rhetoric about Greenland, have left Europeans in need of reassurance.
What does it mean for Portugal?
For Portugal, as for most European allies, the summit is above all about money and timelines: the path to 5% forces heavy budget choices in the coming years, between defence and everything else. Then there is the industrial bill — Rutte has promised billions in new defence contracts, and countries with their own industry want their share. This morning’s mass attack on Kyiv, on the very eve of the summit, took care of reminding everyone why the conversation stopped being theoretical.
See also: the latest mass attack on Kyiv. Official summit documentation at nato.int.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons