NATO unveils billions in arms deals to prove its firepower as Trump arrives in Ankara
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — President Donald Trump arrived in Ankara Tuesday afternoon for the NATO summit, as the transatlantic military alliance was announcing billions in arms deals in an attempt to appease the mercurial U.S. leader.
Trump, who has often upended NATO gatherings with complaints that European allies did not spend enough on their own defense, was expected to first sit down with Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, a close ally who is hosting this year’s gathering and who warmly greeted the U.S. president at a local air base.
Earlier in the day, NATO showcased a series of military projects worth billions of dollars — an investment that the alliance’s secretary-general, Mark Rutte, called “money well spent.” An energized Rutte was speaking to government ministers and defense industry officials at a forum billed as NATO’s “big reveal,” to the thrum of techno music and a slick video display.
NATO as an organization does not own any weapons — these are the property of the 32 member countries — but it does have a fleet of 14 AWACS early warning radar surveillance planes that are about 50 years old, along with some newer surveillance drones.
