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    Czech Republic ‘certainly not’ on path to higher defence spending target, says Babis

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    PRAGUE, Feb 26 (Reuters) - The ‌Czech Republic is "certainly not" setting a path to reach ​higher defence spending levels despite rising NATO targets, Prime Minister Andrej Babis said on Thursday, ⁠marking a clear departure from the previous government's policy.

    Babis' government, led by his populist ANO party, took power in December and is pushing a ​re-worked 2026 budget plan through parliament. It has faced some criticism over lower defence ‌spending, however.

    Babis said before last year's election that a NATO agreement to gradually raise defence spending to 5% of gross domestic product was unrealistic.

    Asked in an ⁠online interview on Thursday on news server Denik.cz if the ⁠government was on a path to a core defence spending target of 3.5% of GDP set in the NATO agreement, Babis said: "Certainly not."

    "Our priority is the health of our citizens, so that they live long lives," he ‌said.

    Babis won last year's election with promises to concentrate more on people's ⁠standard of living by boosting wages, cutting some taxes ‌and adding new benefits.

    The new government's 2026 ​budget proposal cuts spending on defence to 2.1% of GDP versus the previous centre-right cabinet's plan for 2.35% - a plan Defence Minister Jaromir Zuna said ‌on Wednesday would not hurt army modernisation projects.

    The ​previous administration - a staunch supporter ⁠of Kyiv in the Ukraine-Russia war - had sought for defence ‌spending to gradually rise to 3% of ⁠GDP by 2030. Its former prime minister, Petr Fiala, said in reaction to Babis' comments on Thursday that security should be a leading concern for ​the government.

    The new government ‌has continued a Czech-led initiative sourcing large-calibre ammunition for Ukraine and financed by ⁠donations from countries like Germany. But ​it has stopped providing budget funds itself to the programme.

    (Reporting by ​Jason Hovet; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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