THE HAGUE, Netherlands — U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday wrapped up participation in the annual NATO summit facing an alliance that had largely bent to his will.
Far from the tense meetings of Trump's first term, much of the annual summit in The Hague seemed catered to the impulses and worldviews of the Republican president whose ''America First'' foreign policy ethos downplays the importance and influence of multilateral coalitions.
After less than 24 hours on the ground in the Netherlands, Trump headed back to Washington having secured a major policy change he's pushed for since 2017: a significant boost in defense spending by other NATO countries whom the president has for years accused of freeloading off the United States. The focus on Ukraine was scaled back dramatically, with its invasion by Russia earning only a passing mention in the summit's official statement, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's profile at the gathering diminished.
Trump also sent NATO scattering for reassurances that the United States would remain committed to the alliance's mutual defense pledge, affirming on Wednesday that he would abide by Article 5 of the NATO treaty just a day after he rattled the 32-nation alliance by being equivocal about the pact.
''I stand with it. That's why I'm here," Trump said when asked to clarify his stance on Article 5. "If I didn't stand with it, I wouldn't be here.''
Trump shifts his tone on NATO
At a news conference later Wednesday, Trump sounded reflective as he described feeling inspired by other NATO countries that were motivated to provide for their own defense by bolstering their own spending.
''They want to protect their country, and they need the United States, and without the United States, it's not going to be the same,'' Trump said, later adding: ''I left here differently. I -- I left here saying, ‘These people really love their countries. It's not a rip-off.' And we are here to help them protect their country.''