NATO Ankara summit: who's going and what to expect
Baku, July 6, AZERTAC
NATO leaders will gather in Ankara for a summit on Tuesday and Wednesday, amid pressure from President Donald Trump for Europe to step up defence spending and following months of transatlantic friction over the Iran war and Greenland, according to Reuters.
The U.S.. president's frequent criticism of NATO, along with announced troop withdrawals from Europe and a six-month review of the U.S. military presence on the continent, has fuelled uncertainty within the alliance.
The Trump administration has pushed for Europe to boost defence investment and take on primary responsibility for the continent's defence.
Officials expect leaders to focus on progress towards defence spending targets, boosting defence industrial production and how to implement "burden-shifting" from the U.S. to Europe.
Leaders from NATO's 32 member countries, including Trump, will attend the summit.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are expected to join a dinner with NATO leaders on Tuesday evening.
European leaders will aim to show Trump that they are delivering on a pledge made at a summit in The Hague last year to spend 5% of gross domestic product on defence and defence-related measures by 2035.
"In 2025, European Allies and Canada increased their investments in core defence requirements by more than $139bn," leaders are expected to say in a summit declaration, according to a text seen by Reuters.
"We are building the future: a stronger Europe in a stronger NATO - a modernised Alliance. European Allies and Canada, working with the United States, are assuming greater responsibility for the Alliance’s defence," they are set to say.
NATO members are expected to reaffirm support for Ukraine and pledge further assistance.
"For 2026, Allies pledge €70bn in military equipment, assistance and training for Ukraine and affirm their sovereign commitments to sustaining at least equivalent levels in 2027," the leaders are expected to say.
Part of the funding will come from existing bilateral pledges and an EU loan facility that provides €60 billion for Ukrainian defence investment and procurement for 2026-2027. The United States is not expected to contribute funding.
While last year's summit focused on agreeing a new spending pledge, officials want this year's gathering to focus on scaling up weapons production and boosting defence innovation.
The alliance will host a defence industry forum in Ankara on Tuesday, where deals worth tens of billions of dollars will be announced.
European officials are concerned that the Iran war, and Trump's irritation with European governments over their response to it, could overshadow the summit.
In their summit declaration, leaders are expected to say that "allies reiterate that Iran must never have a nuclear weapon and call on Iran to fully respect freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz."
Turkey will seek to highlight its growing defence industry capabilities and repeat its longstanding call for alliance members to lift all restrictions on defence trade within NATO.
President Tayyip Erdogan will also want to make progress with allies such as France and Italy on the purchase of SAMP/T missile defence systems and other defence industry cooperation.
In bilateral talks with Trump, Erdogan is expected to highlight improving ties between Ankara and Washington while pressing for the lifting of U.S. sanctions and renewed access to the F-35 fighter jet programme.
Also in Ankara, NATO foreign ministers are expected to meet counterparts from Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, and to hold a dinner discussion with Ukraine's foreign minister and European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas.
NATO defence ministers are also set to hold talks with ministers from Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea.