Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Boosting NATO spend means upping protection for Ukraine, Kaja Kallas tells Euronews' Europe Today

Europe Today - Euronews
Europe Today - Euronews Copyright  Euronews
Copyright Euronews
By Euronews
Published on Updated
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button

An exclusive interview with EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas was a highlight of Euronews' Europe Today morning show, featuring the latest on the ground in the Hague at the NATO summit.

ADVERTISEMENT

If NATO member states pledge to increase their defence expenditure to 5% of GDP, that will convert into more assistance for Ukraine, EU High Representative Kaja Kallas told Euronews' morning show Europe Today.

Kallas was asked if the US was diverging from the other NATO members in its approach to Ukraine.

“When member states agreed to spend more on defence, that also means that they have more means to help Ukraine," she told Euronews' Shona Murray, on the ground in the Hague for the NATO summit on Wednesday.

“When it comes to Europe, we have agreed that we will support Ukraine militarily, and we will also put more pressure on Russia so that they would also want peace in order end this war, so it is very clear for us,” she said.

The show included an update on the latest in the Middle East, where a fragile ceasefire remains intact, amid news reports from the US suggesting that US airstrikes on Sunday may not have neutralised Iranian nuclear capacities to the extent touted by the White House.

The show also included exclusive discussion with the foreign ministers of Estonia and Belgium on the NATO 5% GDP target, with both countries adopting contrasting attitudes.

It also included an explainer on the 5% target: what it means in practice.

Watch the full show here.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more

WATCH Europe Today: Will China and EU agree on anything at Beijing summit?

MAGA-aligned conservative groups actively lobby MEPs on climate and tech laws, report claims

Dutch police break up climate protest near The Hague ahead of NATO summit