NATO defense spending to fall this year despite Russia tensions

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Military spending by NATO countries is set to fall again this year in real terms despite increased tensions with Russia and a pledge by alliance leaders last year to halt falls in defense budgets, NATO figures released on Monday showed. The figures showed defense spending by the 28 members of the alliance is set to fall by 1.5 percent in real terms this year after a 3.9 percent fall in 2014. The fall comes at a time when tension between NATO and Russia is running high over the Ukraine conflict. Russia has sharply raised its defense spending over the past decade. It also comes in spite of a pledge by NATO leaders, jolted by Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region, last September to stop cutting military spending and move toward the alliance's target of spending 2 percent of their economic output on defense within a decade. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said 18 allies were set to raise defense spending this year in real terms, but the total was lower, continuing a trend of declining military spending, especially by European NATO allies. "So we need to redouble our efforts to reverse this trend. Because we are facing more challenges, and we cannot do more with less indefinitely," he told a news conference. He said he would raise the issue with NATO defense ministers who meet in Brussels on Wednesday and Thursday. NATO expects five NATO allies to meet the 2 percent spending goal in 2015, up from four in 2014. Poland, which has embarked on a major military modernization program, is set to join the United States, Britain, Estonia and Greece as the only NATO allies meeting the target. The United States frequently criticizes its European allies for not spending enough on defense. U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Raymond Odierno urged Britain in a newspaper interview in March to maintain defense spending at the NATO target level of 2 percent of national output. But the British government has declined to commit to meeting the target beyond the current financial year, saying it will depend on the outcome of a defense spending review. (Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Hugh Lawson)