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Italian Defence Minister Optimistic Ahead of NATO Summit in Ankara

Italy's Defence Minister Guido Crosetto expressed optimism ahead of the NATO summit in Ankara, stating that commitments will be respected and no critical issues are foreseen. He noted that US President Donald Trump's approach involves pressing allies, but stressed that institutional dialogue with Washington remains excellent. Crosetto argued that defence spending is not an alternative to social spending, as security underpins all other expenditures. He also highlighted that Italy, Germany, and Japan face constitutional limits on declaring war, operating only within alliances or international mandates.

Italian Defence Minister expresses optimism ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Rome, July 5

Italy's Defence Minister Guido Crosetto on Sunday expressed optimism regarding the upcoming North Atlantic Treaty Organisation Summit in Ankara.

"Ankara (Summit) has been built so that everything works, commitments will be respected and each country presents itself having done its part," Crosetto said, via video, at the 'Pantelleria Mediterraneo d'Autore', emphasising that he sees no critical issues compared to the previous summit. "Then we will see what (US President Donald) Trump will do; it will be a very short summit," he added.

On transatlantic relations, Crosetto reiterated that "real relations with the US are excellent, like those a year ago, or 5 years ago", noting that dialogue with Washington takes place steadily at an institutional level. "Trump has his way of doing politics, of pressing allies," he said, adding "it's his way of acting so that allies react," Italian news agency Adnkronos reported.

On the topic of defence, Crosetto ruled out conflicts with social spending. "I have never thought that defence spending should be an alternative to healthcare, culture, and welfare. Without defence, there is no security and no social spending," he stated, emphasising the importance of alliances.

Regarding international scenarios, Crosetto said that the competition between great powers will be primarily technological and will concern raw materials, rare earths, and energy. "In this framework - he added - Italy, Germany, and Japan are three nations that emerged defeated from the Second World War and whose Constitutions were written to prevent them from waging wars". For this reason, he explained, "none of our three nations can declare war as other countries can", but must operate within alliances or international mandates.

Regarding the controversies related to US flights from Italian bases, the minister spoke of "controversies we could have avoided", stressing that "when it was necessary to say no, this government did so." According to Crosetto, such discussions risk being perceived negatively by the United States and do not help bilateral relations.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Crosetto's point about defence not being an alternative to healthcare is refreshing. In India too we often debate this balance - security vs social welfare. But his comment about Italy, Germany and Japan not being able to declare war due to their constitutions - that's a unique perspective from a NATO member. 🤔

Vikram M

The bit about Trump pressing allies - sounds familiar! India also has to navigate this with US trade and defence deals. But I appreciate Crosetto's candidness about real relations being excellent despite Trump's style. Straight talk is rare in diplomacy.

Siddharth J

"Without defence, there is no security and no social spending" - this is a powerful line. India's defence budget is always under scrutiny, but this minister makes a valid point about security being foundational. However, I do question how much of this is posturing before a summit.

Amanda J

As someone from the West, I find the reference to WWII-era constitutions holding back countries like Italy, Germany and Japan really interesting. It shows how history shapes modern geopolitics. India, being a democracy with a different post-colonial path, has very different constraints.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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