
NATO Allies Commit £37 Billion to New Missile Defence Programme at Ankara Summit
NATO member states have collectively pledged £37 billion towards a new cooperative missile defence system, an agreement solidified at a summit convened by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in Ankara. Around a dozen national leaders attended the discussions focused on advancing the programme's implementation.
This substantial investment is intended to bolster the alliance's defensive infrastructure, specifically targeting long-range threats. While framed by Western governments as a necessary measure for collective security, such military procurements invariably serve the material interests of arms manufacturers and reinforce the strategic posturing of NATO powers in the broader region.
The initiative underscores ongoing efforts by Western powers to integrate and expand their military capabilities, often presented as responses to external threats but consistently undergirding the economic and geopolitical dominance of states like the USA and the UK.






