The
White House responded to Trump’s comments, calling them “appalling and
unhinged.”
Donald
Trump has said he would “encourage” Russia to attack any NATO member that fails
to pay its bills as part of the Western military alliance.
At a
rally on Saturday, he said he had once told a leader he would not protect a nation
behind on its payments, and would “encourage” the aggressors to “do whatever
the hell they want”.
Members
of NATO commit to defend any nation in the bloc that gets attacked.
The
White House called the comments “appalling and unhinged”.
Addressing
crowds during the rally in South Carolina, Mr. Trump said he had made his
comments about Russia during a meeting of leaders of NATO countries.
He
recalled that the leader of a “big country” had presented a hypothetical
situation in which he was not meeting his financial obligations within NATO and
had come under attack from Moscow.
Mr.
Trump said the leader had asked if the US would come to his country’s aid in
that scenario, which prompted him to issue a rebuke.
“I said: ‘You didn’t pay? You’re delinquent?’…
‘No I would not protect you, in fact I would encourage them to do whatever they
want. You gotta pay.'”
A White
House spokesman said the former president was “encouraging invasions of our
closest allies by murderous regimes” and labelled the comments “appalling and
unhinged”.
He
added that the statement “endangers American national security, global
stability and our economy at home”.
Mr.
Trump, the favorite to run again as the Republican candidate in this year’s US
presidential election, has long been critical of NATO and what he sees as an
excessive financial burden on the United States to guarantee the defence of 30
other nations.
Russia
launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, after Mr Trump left
office. He has since bemoaned the amount of US money sent to Ukraine, which is
not a NATO member.
The US
has provided Ukraine with more financial support than any other country – totaling
more than $44bn (£34bn) since the 2022 invasion, according to White House
figures from December.
However,
Republicans in Congress have since the turn of the year blocked all new funding
– demanding tough measures to restrict migration into the US on its southern
border, and then refusing the amended bill when it was presented earlier this
week.
Mr.
Trump celebrated that rejection during Saturday’s rally, saying the proposals
made by President Biden had been “disastrous”.
The two
issues have now been successfully separated, meaning that senators are now able
to debate the aid money separately.
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