- [Narrator] NATO is turning 70,
and there were high hopes
for a drama-free celebration,
but this year's summit turned out to be
a little more complicated than expected.
- Macron said that the alliance
was experiencing what
he called brain death.
- You just can't go around
making statements like that about NATO.
It's very disrespectful.
Nobody needs NATO more than France.
- [Narrator] As tensions
within the alliance
keep playing up publicly,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
is having a bit of an identity crisis.
- I don't think we're looking
at the imminent breakup of NATO.
What we're seeing at
the minute is a debate
about what the alliance is
gonna be in the next 70 years.
- [Narrator] The big
question for NATO today is,
does it need to change to remain relevant?
(rousing orchestral music)
- [Narrator] NATO's banner flies proudly.
- [Narrator] NATO has evolved over time,
from a 12-member group formed in 1949
and focused on protecting
Europe from the Soviet Union
to the 29-member global security
organization it is today,
conducting a range of security
missions around the world.
The alliance has always been based
on the same principle
of a collective defense.
An attack on one member country
is an attack on all allies.
- The benefits are enormous.
You're in NATO and your
country is attacked,
then all of the other
countries are bound by treaty
to come to your defense as well.
- [Narrator] Here's
where things get tricky.
The concept of a collective defense
rests on the idea that
everyone is on the same page
about who the enemy is.
In the early days, the enemy
was clear, the Soviet Union.
- [Narrator] Since the foundation
of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization,
the communists have gained not one foot
of new territory in Europe.
- [Narrator] Today, it's not so simple.
- I think, though, that
the main fundamental shift
is this big question that
Macron has brought up,
so is Russia our enemy?
No, is his answer.
Is China our enemy?
No, is his answer.
I suppose, then, the question
from the other allies is,
well, what are they?
(pensive orchestral music)
- [Narrator] One way the
organization is evolving
is by shifting some of its resources
to things like cybersecurity and space,
but that collective commitment
to defense costs money,
and money has become a
big reason for tensions.
- It's not right to be
taken advantage of on NATO
and also, then, to be taken
advantage of on trade,
and that's what happens, and
we can't let that happen.
- [Narrator] The issue has
been called burden-sharing
or the idea that member countries
should all pay their fair share.
- [Speaker] Fair burden-sharing
underpins everything that we do.
- [Narrator] The U.S. has been
seen as the leader of NATO,
and it spends more on defense
than the other members,
which President Trump
and others say is unfair.
- NATO members must finally contribute
their fair share and meet
their financial obligations.
- [Narrator] For context,
Trump isn't the first president
to raise the issue.
- Everybody's gotta step up,
and everybody's gotta do better.
- [Narrator] But he is
the first to suggest
he might not defend some NATO
allies if they don't pay up.
In 2014, NATO countries formally agreed
to spend 2% of their
GDP on defense by 2024.
In 2016, only four of the 29
allies were spending that much.
Now, the White House says
that number's up to nine.
Still, there's no penalty
if countries don't make the guideline
and not everyone is expected
to reach the 2% by 2040.
- There's been a impetus again
to start investing in defense.
It's very expensive, you
have to take money away
from things like hospitals and schools,
which is not necessarily popular,
so that's been difficult for governments.
- [Narrator] Different countries
have different priorities.
Some are more willing to
invest in defense than others,
and those riffs are a manifestation
of fundamental disagreements
over how the alliance should operate.
Just take Trump's decision to
pull U.S. troops out of Syria.
Turkey, which is also a NATO
member, moved into the region.
This all happened without
consulting NATO allies,
and NATO members were
split on how to respond.
- NATO plays things very cool.
They are an alliance of 29 countries.
Over the years, NATO's become very good
at balancing the interests
of all of those countries.
Certainly, Macron's
comments have shaken up
what would've been,
what they hoped to be
a more sedate affair.
(pleasant orchestral music)
