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Revision as of 21:30, 24 September 2023

NATO member states as of 2023.

NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) is an international military alliance consisting of 31 member states from Europe and North America. It was established at the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty on 4 April 1949. Article 5 of the treaty states that if an armed attack occurs against one of the member states, it shall be considered an attack against all members, and other members shall assist the attacked member, with armed forces if necessary.[1] Article 6 of the treaty limits the scope of Article 5 to the islands north of the Tropic of Cancer, the North American and European mainlands, the entirety of Turkey, and French Algeria, the last of which is moot. Thus, an attack on Hawaii, Puerto Rico, French Guiana, the Falkland Islands, Ceuta or Melilla, among other places, would not trigger an Article 5 response.

Of the 31 member countries, 29 are in Europe and two are in North America. Between 1994 and 1997, wider forums for regional cooperation between NATO and its neighbors were set up, including the Partnership for Peace, the Mediterranean Dialogue initiative, and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council.

All members have militaries, except for Iceland, which does not have a typical army (but it does have a coast guard and a small unit of civilian specialists for NATO operations). Three of NATO's members are nuclear weapons states: France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. NATO has 12 original founding member states. Three more members joined between 1952 and 1955, and a fourth joined in 1982. After the end of the Cold War, NATO added 15 more members from 1999 to 2023.[2]

NATO currently recognizes Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Sweden, and Ukraine as aspiring members as part of their Open Doors enlargement policy.[3]

Map of NATO in Europe:
  Current members
  Countries in the process of accession
  Countries seeking membership
  Countries where membership is not a goal
  CSTO

Founding members and enlargement

NATO was established on 4 April 1949 via the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty (Washington Treaty). The 12 founding members of the Alliance were: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[4]

The various allies all sign the Ottawa Agreement,[5] which is a 1951 document that acts to embody civilian oversight of the Alliance.[5][6]

Current membership consists of 31 countries. In addition to the 12 founding countries, four new members joined during the Cold War: Greece and Turkey (1952), West Germany (1955) and Spain (1982). In 1990, the territory of the former East Germany was added with the reunification of Germany. NATO further expanded after the Cold War, adding the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland (1999), Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia (2004), Albania and Croatia (2009), Montenegro (2017), North Macedonia (2020), and Finland (2023).[4] Of the territories and members added between 1990 and 2023, all were either formerly part of the Warsaw Pact (including the formerly Soviet Baltic states) or territories of the former Yugoslavia except for Finland. No countries have left NATO since its founding.

Currently, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization now covers a total area of 27,131,087 km2 (10,475,371 sq mi), since the accession of Finland on 4 April 2023.

Membership aspirations

As of April 2023, four additional states have formally informed NATO of their membership aspirations: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Sweden and Ukraine.[3]

  • NATO members agreed at the 2008 Bucharest Summit that Georgia and Ukraine "will become members of NATO in the future".[7]
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina was invited by NATO to join the Membership Action Plan (MAP) in April 2010.[7]
  • In May 2022, Finland and Sweden simultaneously submitted official application letters to become NATO members.[8][9]
    • Finland became a member on April 4, 2023.
    • As of July 10, 2023, all members except Hungary and Turkey had ratified Sweden's accession protocol, with both committing to complete their approval by October.[10]

List of member countries

The current members and their dates of admission are listed below.

Flag Map Name Capital Accession[11] Popu­lation[a] Area[13] Military budget as %GDP 2020[14] GDP 2020 USD[15]
Albania Tirana 1 April 2009 002,793,385 28,748 km2 (11,100 sq mi) 1.5 15,131,866,271
Belgium Brussels 24 August 1949[b] 011,778,842 30,528 km2 (11,787 sq mi) 1.1 521,676,942,135
Bulgaria Sofia 29 March 2004 006,919,180 110,879 km2 (42,811 sq mi) 1.8 69,889,347,433
Canada Ottawa 24 August 1949[b] 038,943,231 9,984,670 km2 (3,855,103 sq mi) 1.4 1,645,423,407,568
Croatia Zagreb 1 April 2009 003,901,833 56,594 km2 (21,851 sq mi) 1.8 79,163,000,000
Czech Republic[c] Prague 12 March 1999 010,702,596 78,867 km2 (30,451 sq mi) 1.4 245,339,322,067
Denmark[d] Copenhagen 24 August 1949[b] 005,958,380 2,210,573 km2 (853,507 sq mi)[e] 1.4 356,084,867,686
Estonia Tallinn 29 March 2004 001,220,042 45,228 km2 (17,463 sq mi) 2.3 30,650,285,472
Finland Helsinki 4 April 2023 005,566,000 338,455 km2 (130,678 sq mi) 1.5 269,751,000,000
France[f] Paris 24 August 1949[b] 068,084,217 643,427 km2 (248,429 sq mi) 2.1 2,630,317,731,455
Germany[g] Berlin 6 May 1955
(West Germany)
3 October 1990
(Germany)
079,903,481 357,022 km2 (137,847 sq mi) 1.4 3,846,413,928,654
Greece Athens 18 February 1952 010,569,703 131,957 km2 (50,949 sq mi) 2.8 188,835,201,626
Hungary Budapest 12 March 1999 009,728,337 93,028 km2 (35,918 sq mi) 1.6 156,743,134,666
Iceland Reykjavík 24 August 1949[b] 000,354,234 103,000 km2 (39,769 sq mi) 0.0 21,718,075,725
Italy Rome 062,390,364 301,340 km2 (116,348 sq mi) 1.6 1,892,574,064,222
Latvia Riga 29 March 2004 001,862,687 64,589 km2 (24,938 sq mi) 2.3 33,645,460,617
Lithuania Vilnius 002,711,566 65,300 km2 (25,212 sq mi) 2.1 56,546,957,475
Luxembourg Luxembourg 24 August 1949[b] 000,639,589 2,586 km2 (998 sq mi) 0.8 73,353,132,794
Montenegro Podgorica 5 June 2017 000,607,414 13,812 km2 (5,333 sq mi) 2.1 4,780,722,122
Netherlands[h] Amsterdam 24 August 1949[b] 017,337,403 41,543 km2 (16,040 sq mi)[i] 1.4 913,865,395,790
North Macedonia Skopje 27 March 2020 002,128,262[j] 25,713 km2 (9,928 sq mi) 1.3 12,116,981,815
Norway[k] Oslo 24 August 1949[b] 005,509,591 323,802 km2 (125,021 sq mi)[note 1] 1.9 362,198,318,435
Poland Warsaw 12 March 1999 038,185,913 312,685 km2 (120,728 sq mi) 2.2 596,624,355,720
Portugal Lisbon 24 August 1949[b] 010,263,850 92,090 km2 (35,556 sq mi) 2.1 228,539,245,045
Romania Bucharest 29 March 2004 021,230,362 238,391 km2 (92,043 sq mi) 2.3 249,511,333,648
Slovakia Bratislava 005,436,066 49,035 km2 (18,933 sq mi) 1.8 105,172,564,492
Slovenia Ljubljana 002,102,106 20,273 km2 (7,827 sq mi) 1.1 53,589,609,581
Spain[l] Madrid 30 May 1982 047,260,584 505,370 km2 (195,124 sq mi) 1.4 1,281,484,640,044
Turkey[m] Ankara 18 February 1952 082,482,383 783,562 km2 (302,535 sq mi) 2.8 719,954,821,683
United Kingdom[n] London 24 August 1949[b] 067,081,000 243,610 km2 (94,058 sq mi) 2.2 2,756,900,214,107
United States[o] Washington, D.C. 334,998,398 9,833,520 km2 (3,796,743 sq mi) 3.7 20,893,743,833,000

Special arrangements

The three Nordic countries which joined NATO as founding members, Denmark, Iceland and Norway, chose to limit their participation in three areas: there would be no permanent peacetime bases, no nuclear warheads and no Allied military activity (unless invited) permitted on their territory. However, Denmark allowed the U.S. to maintain an existing base, Thule Air Base (now Pituffik Space Base), in Greenland.[17]

From the mid-1960s to the mid-1990s, France pursued a military strategy of independence from NATO under a policy dubbed "Gaullo-Mitterrandism".[18] Nicolas Sarkozy negotiated the return of France to the integrated military command and the Defence Planning Committee in 2009, the latter being disbanded the following year. France remains the only NATO member outside the Nuclear Planning Group and unlike the United States and the United Kingdom, will not commit its nuclear-armed submarines to the alliance.[19][20]

Military personnel

Comparison of military personnel per 1,000 capita.
50
100
150
200
250
300
Countries (see legend)
  •   Estonia
  •   Finland
  •   Greece
  •   Portugal
  •   Montenegro
  •   Lithuania
  •   Norway
  •   Turkey
  •   Latvia
  •   Denmark
  •   Croatia
  •   North Macedonia
  •   Romania
  •   Hungary
  •   United States
  •   Bulgaria
  •   Italy
  •   France
  •   Poland
  •   Spain
  •   Slovenia
  •   United Kingdom
  •   Slovakia
  •   Canada
  •   Germany
  •   Netherlands
  •   Albania
  •   Belgium
  •   Czech Republic
  •   Luxembourg
  •   Iceland

The following list is constructed from The Military Balance, published annually by the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Numbers of military personnel
Country[21] Active Reserve Para­mili­tary Total Per 1,000 capita
total active
Albania Albania 10,500 0 500 11,000 3.6 3.4
Belgium Belgium 29,400 5,900 0 35,300 3 2.5
Bulgaria Bulgaria 42,663 3,000 0 45,663 6.6 6.2
Canada Canada 70,500 35,600 5,500 111,600 2.9 1.9
Croatia Croatia 16,700 21,000 3,000 40,700 9.7 4
Czech Republic Czech Republic 27,400 4,200 0 31,600 3 2.6
Denmark Denmark 20,440 45,800 0 66,240 11.2 3.5
Estonia Estonia 7,600 230,000 15,800 253,400 207.7 6.2
Finland Finland 24,250 900,000 14,321 938,571 168.7 4.4
France France 208,750 141,050 175,050 524,850 7.7 3.1
Germany Germany 184,100 50,050 0 234,150 2.9 2.3
Greece Greece 143,300 221,350 4,000 368,650 34.8 13.5
Hungary Hungary 41,600 20,000 12,000 73,600 7.6 4.3
Iceland Iceland 250 250 250 750 2.1 0.7
Italy Italy[p] 175,100 18,300 182,350 375,750 6 2.8
Latvia Latvia 16,700 36,000 0 52,700 28.3 9
Lithuania Lithuania 23,000 90,000 14,150 127,150 46.9 8.5
Luxembourg Luxembourg 940 0 600 1,540 2.4 1.5
Montenegro Montenegro 2,350 2,800 10,100 15,250 25.1 3.9
Netherlands Netherlands 41,543 6,643 6,500 54,686 3.2 2.4
North Macedonia North Macedonia 8,000 26,850 7,600 42,450 19.9 3.8
Norway Norway 25,400 40,000 0 65,400 11.9 4.6
Poland Poland 164,500 200,000 75,400 439,900 11.5 4.3
Portugal Portugal 33,200 211,700 24,700 269,600 26.3 3.2
Romania Romania 72,000 55,000 79,900 206,900 9.7 3.4
Slovakia Slovakia 19,500 0 0 19,500 3.6 3.6
Slovenia Slovenia 7,500 26,200 5,950 39,650 18.9 3.6
Spain Spain 133,282 15,450 75,800 224,532 4.8 2.8
Turkey Turkey 680,811 380,700 156,800 1,218,311 14.8 8.3
United Kingdom United Kingdom 196,453 78,600 0 275,053 4.2 3
United States United States 1,560,870 1,023,543 0 2,584,413 7.7 4.7
NATO NATO 3,845,002 3,735,203 870,271 8,450,476 8.9 4

Military expenditures

Military spending of the US compared to 29 other NATO member countries (all except Finland) (US$ millions).[q]

  United States (70.46%)
  All other NATO countries total[r] (29.53%)

Total military spending of NATO member countries except the United States and Finland (US$ millions).[q][s]

  Greece (1.58%)
  Estonia (0.21%)
  Portugal (1.09%)
  Montenegro (0.03%)
  Lithuania (0.35%)
  Norway (2.34%)
  Turkey (4.54%)
  Latvia (0.23%)
  Denmark (1.55%)
  Croatia (0.35%)
  North Macedonia (0.035%)
  Romania (1.64%)
  Hungary (0.67%)
  Bulgaria (0.35%)
  Italy (7.99%)
  France (16.55%)
  Poland (3.91%)
  Spain (4.29%)
  Slovenia (0.18%)
  United Kingdom (19.72%)
  Slovakia (0.62%)
  Canada (7.15%)
  Germany (17.68%)
  Netherlands (4.05%)
  Other (2.895%)

United States and Finland omitted - see above

The defence spending of the United States is more than double the defence spending of all other NATO members combined.[22] Criticism of the fact that many member states were not contributing their fair share in accordance with the international agreement by then US president Donald Trump caused various reactions from American and European political figures, ranging from ridicule to panic.[23][24][25]

Total Military budget of European NATO countries (excluding Turkey) as a percentage of US military budget. Chinese and Russian military spending included for comparison[26]
Member state Popu­lation[a] GDP
(nomi­nal)[t]
Defence expenditure (US$)[u] Person­nel[u]
Total
($mil­lions)
% real GDP Per capita Per 1,000
personnel
($millions)
 Albania 3,074,579 20.18 198 1.26 58 29 6,800
 Belgium 11,720,716 624.25 4,921 0.93 392 189 26,000
 Bulgaria 6,966,899 100.64 1,079 1.61 132 43 25,000
 Canada 38,436,447 2,089.67 21,885 1.27 569 304 72,000
 Croatia 4,227,746 78.89 1,072 1.75 238 71 15,000
 Czech Republic 10,702,498 330.48 2,969 1.19 236 114 26,000
 Denmark 5,869,410 405.63 4,760 1.35 760 280 17,000
 Estonia 1,228,624 41.55 669 2.13 429 106 6,300
 Finland 5,566,000 301.67 4,046 1.50
 France 67,413,000 2,923.93 50,659 1.84 709 244 208,000
 Germany 84,543,512 4,308.85 54,113 1.36 591 294 184,000
 Greece 10,718,565 239.30 4,844 2.24 431 46 105,000
 Hungary 9,771,827 188.51 2,080 1.21 178 104 20,000
 Iceland 354,234 28.63
 Italy 60,317,116 2,169.75 24,482 1.22 385 137 179,000
 Latvia 1,881,232 47.40 724 2.01 325 113 6,400
 Lithuania 2,731,464 78.35 1,084 2.13 336 53 21,000
 Luxembourg 628,381 86.97 391 0.55 552 434 900
 Montenegro 609,859 7.03 92 1.65 126 58 1,600
 Netherlands 17,674,000 1,080.88 12,419 1.35 655 303 41,000
 North Macedonia 2,125,971 15.28 108 1.09 51 15 7,200
 Norway 5,467,439 554.10 7,179 1.70 1,308 359 20,000
 Poland 38,282,325 748.89 11,971 2.01 296 97 123,000
 Portugal 10,344,802 267.72 3,358 1.41 299 112 30,000
 Romania 21,302,893 348.90 5,043 2.04 225 73 69,000
 Slovakia 5,440,602 127.53 1,905 1.74 322 147 13,000
 Slovenia 2,102,678 68.11 581 1.04 253 85 6,800
 Spain 47,450,795 1,492.43 13,156 0.92 264 109 121,000
 Turkey 83,614,362 1,029.30 13,919 1.89 225 32 435,000
 United Kingdom 68,897,294 3,158.94 60,376 2.13 979 419 144,000
 United States 334,233,854 26,854.60 730,149 3.42 2,072 546 1,338,000
 NATO 958,935,122 49,818.36 1,036,186 2.51 1,045 317 3,268,000

Pew Research Center's 2016 survey among its member states showed that while most countries viewed NATO positively, most NATO members preferred keeping their military spending the same. The response to whether their country should militarily aid another NATO country if it were to get into a serious military conflict with Russia was also mixed. Roughly half or fewer in six of the eight countries surveyed say their country should use military force if Russia attacks a neighboring country that is a NATO ally. And at least half in three of the eight NATO countries say that their government should not use military force in such circumstances. The strongest opposition to responding with armed force is in Germany (58%), followed by France (53%) and Italy (51%). More than half of Americans (56%) and Canadians (53%) are willing to respond to Russian military aggression against a fellow NATO country. A plurality of the British (49%) and Poles (48%) would also live up to their Article 5 commitment. The Spanish are divided on the issue: 48% support it, 47% oppose.[29][30]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Population data is based on a July 2021 estimate by the Central Intelligence Agency in The World Factbook.[12]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Founding member of NATO.
  3. ^ Officially referred to by the name Czechia. (See Czech Republic#Name.)
  4. ^ Denmark consists of Denmark proper, the Faroe Islands and Greenland.
  5. ^ including Faroe Islands and Greenland.
  6. ^ Excluding all overseas territories of France apart from Saint Pierre and Miquelon.
  7. ^ Germany initially joined NATO as West Germany. The former country of East Germany became part of NATO after German reunification.
  8. ^ Only the European part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands is part of NATO.
  9. ^ Figure includes the islands of Bonaire, Saba and Sint Eustatius, but they don't fall under the NATO treaty.
  10. ^ North Macedonia's population estimate was missing from Central Intelligence Agency's Country Comparison list in The World Factbook but available in the country's entry.[16]
  11. ^ Excluding Bouvet Island.
  12. ^ Excluding Ceuta and Melilla.
  13. ^ Officially referred to by the name Türkiye. (See Name of Turkey.)
  14. ^ Including Gibraltar and Bermuda. The crown dependencies and other overseas territories are excluded.
  15. ^ Only includes the Contiguous United States, Alaska and Washington, D.C.. But Hawaii and the territories of the United States don't fall under the NATO treaty.
  16. ^ The paramilitary forces of Italy consist of the Carabinieri and the Guardia di Finanza.
  17. ^ a b Country order is the same as the preceding chart (military personnel per 1,000 capita) to maintain the same country colours between charts.
  18. ^ Except Finland
  19. ^ The pie chart format does not allow as many slices as there are countries in NATO, so the countries with the fewest military personnel per capita (Albania, Belgium, Czech Republic, Iceland and Luxembourg) have been combined into a single slice.
  20. ^ Gross domestic product (nominal) data (in billions of US dollars) is based on an April 2023 issue of the World Economic Outlook, which is published by the International Monetary Fund.[27]
  21. ^ a b Defence expenditure and personnel data are based on a June 2019 press release from NATO.[28]
  1. ^ Including Jan Mayen, and Svalbard.

References

Citations
  1. ^ "The North Atlantic Treaty". North Atlantic Treaty Organization. 4 April 1949. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
  2. ^ Center, Notre Dame International Security (23 March 2023). "The Addition of NATO Members Over Time (1949-2023)". ND International Security Center. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Enlargement and Article 10". NATO. 10 June 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2022. Currently, five partner countries have declared their aspirations to NATO membership: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Finland, Georgia, Sweden and Ukraine.
  4. ^ a b NATO. "Member countries". NATO. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  5. ^ a b Mosquera, Andrés B. Muñoz (2019). "The North Atlantic Treaty: Article 9 and NATO's Institutionalization". Volume 34. Emory International Law Review. Really, the Agreement on the Status of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, National Representatives and International Staff signed in Ottawa
  6. ^ "03. Agreement on the Status of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, National Representatives and International Staff, done at Ottawa September 20, 1951". US Department of State.
  7. ^ a b NATO. "Enlargement and Article 10". NATO. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  8. ^ NATO. "Relations with Finland". NATO. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  9. ^ NATO. "Relations with Sweden". NATO. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  10. ^ Sanger, David E.; Erlanger, Steven; Hubbard, Ben; Jakes, Lara (10 July 2023). "Turkey Clears the Way for Sweden's Entry to NATO on the Eve of Summit". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 11 July 2023. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  11. ^ "Member countries". NATO. 4 October 2022. Archived from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  12. ^ "Country Comparisons — Population". Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  13. ^ "Field Listing :: Area". Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  14. ^ "Military expenditure by country as percentage of gross domestic product, 1949-2020" (XLSX). Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. 26 April 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  15. ^ "DataBank: World Development Indicators". World Bank. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  16. ^ "North Macedonia — People and Society". Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  17. ^ "Denmark and NATO - 1949".
  18. ^ "Why the concept of Gaullo-Mitterrandism is still relevant". IRIS. 29 April 2019. Archived from the original on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  19. ^ Cody, Edward (12 March 2009). "After 43 Years, France to Rejoin NATO as Full Member". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  20. ^ Stratton, Allegra (17 June 2008). "Sarkozy military plan unveiled". The Guardian. UK. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  21. ^ The International Institute for Strategic Studies (February 2022). The Military Balance 2022. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-032-27900-8. ISSN 0459-7222.
  22. ^ Where Does The Relationship Between NATO And The U.S. Go From Here?, Huffington Post
  23. ^ NATO allies boost defense spending in the wake of Trump criticism, The Washington Post
  24. ^ Former US ambassador to Nato in withering criticism of Donald Trump, The Independent
  25. ^ Shaken by Trump's Criticism of NATO, Europe Mulls Building Own Military Force, Voice Of America
  26. ^ "SIPRI Military Expenditure Database". SIPRI The independent resource on global security. STOCKHOLM INTERNATIONAL PEACE RESEARCH INSTITUTE.
  27. ^ "GDP, current prices". International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  28. ^ "Defence Expenditure of NATO Countries (2012-2019)" (PDF). NATO. 25 June 2019. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  29. ^ Support for NATO is widespread among member nations, Pew Research
  30. ^ U.S. would defend NATO despite Trump's criticism, Europeans believe: study, Reuters
Bibliography