A Bill to Condition NATO Funding on 2.5% GDP Defense Spending by Allies
Reduces U.S. NATO contributions by 25% for any ally that fails to spend 2.5% of GDP on defense.
Beginning FY27, the U.S. shall reduce its share of NATO common funding by 25% for each ally that fails to spend at least 2.5% of GDP on defense in the prior fiscal year.
The President may waive the reduction for any ally actively engaged in collective defense operations.
The Secretary of Defense shall submit an annual NATO spending report to Congress.
Treasury withholds the funds at the start of each fiscal year based on the prior year's report.
Mechanical parts, sourced & timed
Use this as your pre-round checklist. Memorize the source citation. Time yourself to the delivery target.
- Bill / Number
- S.J. Res. 14 — A Bill to Condition NATO Funding on 2.5% GDP Defense Spending by Allies
- Funding source
- Treasury withholding from NATO common-funding allocation; no new spending.
- Timeline
- Effective FY27.
- Realistic — Treasury already manages NATO contribution mechanics.
- Enforcing agency
- Department of the Treasury + Department of Defense.
- Yes — Congress has Article I §8 appropriations authority.
- Penalty for non-compliance
- Allied funding reduction; possible NATO Article 3 dispute.
- Source citation
- RAND Corporation, Larrabee (2022), 'NATO Burden Sharing' — rand.org.
- Delivery time (read aloud)
- 1:10 (70s)
Penalizing allies during Russian aggression weakens the alliance precisely when it needs strength.
Sec. 2's presidential waiver for allies actively engaged in collective defense addresses exactly this — Poland, the Baltics, Finland, Sweden all qualify. The penalty targets free-riders like Spain (1.3% GDP) and Belgium (1.2%), not front-line states. RAND (2022) confirms burden-sharing pressure raised allied spending 40% post-2014 — incentives work.