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The US administration has appointed Lt. Gen. Alexus G. Grynkewich as both the next top US general in Europe as well as the SACEUR.
The appointment by Trump will be especially welcomed following media reports in recent months that the US was considering relinquishing the role of SACUER which has always been appointed by a US president to NATO.
“It’s a very important decision and there is relief from NATO’s point of view as it’s a positive sign of American engagement and staffing,” a US-based source familiar with the issue told Euronews.
US Army General Dwight D. Eisenhower was NATO’s first SACEUR in 1951, and the role has remained with the US ever since.
“Upon completion of national confirmation processes, Grynkewich will take up his appointment as the successor to General Christopher G. Cavoli, United States Army, at a change of command ceremony at the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in Mons, Belgium, expected in the summer of 2025,” a statement from NATO read.
New targets in defence spending adopted
Meanwhile, NATO defence ministers agreed to a significant surge in defence capability targets for each country, as well as moving to spending 5% of GDP on defence.
They’ve agreed that 3.5% of GDP would be used for “core defence spending” – such as heavy weapons, tanks, air defence. Meanwhile 1.5% of GDP per year will be spent on defence- and security-related areas such as infrastructure, surveillance, and cyber. However, the full list of flexibility has not yet been negotiated.
“These targets describe exactly what capabilities Allies need to invest in over the coming years,” NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte told journalists.
The US has been pushing NATO allies to dramatically increase spending, and expects to see ‘credible progress’ immediately, according to US Ambassador to NATO Mathew Whitaker.
“The threats facing NATO are growing and our adversaries are certainly not waiting for us to re-arm or be ready for them to make the first move,”
“We would prefer our Allies move out urgently on reaching the 5%,” he told journalists in a briefing on the margins of the meetings.
Ambassador Whitaker also said the US is “counting on Europe” to the lead in providing Ukraine with the ‘resources necessary to reach a durable peace’ on the continent.
Mark Rutte reiterated NATO’s recent warnings that Russia could strike NATO territory within the next couple of years. “If we don’t act now, the next three years, we are fine, but we have to start now, because otherwise, from three, four or five years from now, we are really under threat,” he said, adding: “I really mean this. Then you have to get your Russian language course out, or go to New Zealand.”
“It’s good to have continuity about the US in NATO, but with Ukraine it’s a different story. I just don’t think Trump really cares about Ukraine,” the US-based source told Euronews.
“Trump just doesn’t care about Europe – it doesn’t make him richer or help him politically,” the source said.
Referring to the forthcoming NATO summit taking place next month in The Hague, the source said the presence of Ukraine at the summit “will likely be scaled back”, since the US will say, “they’re not members’ so they don’t need to be there”.