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Russia and its Nato neighbors in the Baltic have expanded their military budgets, but the U.S. continues to lead the world in military spending by far. The U.S. spent $610 billion last year, followed by China’s $216 billion.
The Guardian reports:
Spending on arms will rise this year by 60% in Russia, by 50% in Lithuania, by nearly 20% in Poland, and by nearly 15% in Latvia, says the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Sipri.
Ukraine increased its spending on defence by more than 20% last year and plans to more than double its funding of the armed forces in 2015, it says. Neutral Sweden has agreed to increase its military spending by about 15% over five years. It has also made a unilateral “solidarity declaration” to provide support to any EU member of the Nordic nations that comes under armed attack, the Sipri report notes. …
China, Russia and Saudi Arabia have all substantially increased their military spending, though they still fall well behind the US, which remains the world’s largest spender on arms despite a 20% cut in its defence budget since its peak in 2010.
Read more here.
—Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.
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