Pete Hegseth accuses Nato countries of ‘free riding’ in combative address
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has announced a review of the US military presence in Europe, threatening to reduce forces in countries with low defense spending. Speaking at a NATO defense ministers' meeting in Brussels, Hegseth accused some allies of "free riding" and criticized others for not allowing US jets to use their airbases for operations against Iran.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedUS Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has announced a review of the US military presence in Europe, threatening to reduce forces in countries with low defense spending. Speaking at a NATO defense ministers' meeting in Brussels, Hegseth accused some allies of "free riding" and criticized others for not allowing US jets to use their airbases for operations against Iran. The review aims to pressure European nations to increase their military budgets, with US NATO contributions potentially linked to allies meeting defense spending targets. This initiative aligns with the Trump administration's goal for European allies to take greater responsibility for their own defense against Russia, aiming for a 3.5% GDP defense spending target by 2035. While the exact impact is unclear, potential cuts include redeploying US aircraft.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedUS military dues for Nato will be contingent on other countries meeting their defense spending targets.
Hegseth accused some Nato countries of 'free riding' and others of being shameful for not allowing US jets to bomb Iran from their airbases.
Pete Hegseth announced a review of US military presence in Europe, threatening to cut force numbers in countries spending least on defense.
The Trump administration wants European Nato members to increase defense spending to 3.5% of GDP by 2035.
Cuts under consideration include redeploying a third of US F-16 and F-15 jets designated for Nato.