Sir Keir Starmer has said he wants to increase UK defence spending to 3% in the next parliament – ahead of his White House meeting with Donald Trump.
The prime minister, in an unexpected statement in parliament, announced spending would be increased to 2.5% of the UK’s GDP by 2027.
He also announced the government would cut back on foreign aid, reducing current spending from 0.5% of GDP to 0.3%.
Sir Keir reiterated the government’s commitment to NATO, which he described as the “bedrock of our security”, and criticised Russian president Vladimir Putin, saying “tyrants only respond to strength”.
Addressing his upcoming visit to the White House to meet Mr Trump, he said he wants the UK’s relationship with the US to go from “strength to strength”.
Labour promised in their manifesto to increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP from the current 2.3%, however, ministers have previously refused to set out a timeline.
They previously insisted a “path” to get to 2.5% would be set out after a defence spending review is published this spring.
However, after Donald Trump came to power in January, all European governments have faced increasing pressure to raise defence spending immediately.
Mr Trump wants them to raise it to 5% of GDP – something which was last achieved during the Cold War.
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