Nato summit delivers unity and billions in defence deals, Rutte says
Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte stated that this year's Nato summit, hosted by Turkey in Ankara, demonstrated "a huge sense of unity" and secured procurement plans valued at over $50 billion. These deals are intended to help member states meet the agreed-upon defense spending target of 5% of GDP by 2035.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedNato Secretary General Mark Rutte stated that this year's Nato summit, hosted by Turkey in Ankara, demonstrated "a huge sense of unity" and secured procurement plans valued at over $50 billion. These deals are intended to help member states meet the agreed-upon defense spending target of 5% of GDP by 2035. The investments will bolster Nato's capabilities in areas such as precision strike, air and missile defense, uncrewed systems, advanced technologies, and intelligence. Rutte also defended US President Donald Trump's criticisms of the alliance. The procurement plans aim to enhance interoperability and incorporate AI models for warfighting.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThese investments will support Nato’s capability targets across all domains, including deep precision strike, integrated air and missile defence, uncrewed systems, cutting-edge technologies and intelligence capabilities.
More than US$50 billion in procurement deals were agreed as part of efforts to meet the defence spending target of 5 per cent of GDP by 2035.
The summit produced procurement plans worth tens of billions of dollars.
This year’s Nato summit showed “a huge sense of unity”.
Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte defended US President Donald Trump’s criticism of the transatlantic security alliance.