Romania plans to spend a total of 9.8 billion euros ($11.3 billion) on upgrading its military until 2026, the eastern European NATO member's top defense body agreed on Tuesday.

The figure locks Romania's military spending at 2 percent of GDP over the next decade, meeting a key commitment of NATO members.

Romania met the target for the first time this year, making it only the sixth NATO member alongside the United States, the United Kingdom, Greece, Estonia and Poland to hit the benchmark.

Watch video 01:17 Share 'An attack will trigger a response from the whole alliance' Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/2f49g 'An attack on one ally will trigger a response from the whole alliance'

US pressures allies

US President Donald Trump has pressured all 28 alliance members to meet the NATO commitment by 2024 in line with the defense alliance's pact.

Read: How does Germany contribute to NATO?

He has suggested that if NATO members fail to meet the target the United States would reassess some of its commitments.

Trump drew criticism and concern at a NATO summit in May for not reiterating the United States' commitment to the alliance's Article 5 mutual defense clause that says an attack against one member is an attack against all.

Nearly two weeks after the summit in Brussels, he finally committed the United States to Article 5 during a early June press conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis at the White House.

Romania, Poland and the Baltic states are some of the United States' strongest Eastern European allies concerned about a resurgent and aggressive Russia.

Read: NATO defense chief urges European nations to boost defense spending

Romania is set to buy the Patriot missile defense system from the United States.

Romania to buy Patriot system

Romania hosts an $800 million US missile defense site, part of a larger missile shield that the United States says is designed to protect Europe from missile threats from Iran and non-state actors.

Russia has long been angered over the defense shield, arguing it aims to give the United States a missile advantage and violates previous defense treaties between the two rivals.

Separately, Romanian Defense Minister Adrian Tutuianu said last week that Romania would buy Patriot missiles worth $3.9 billion after the United States approved the sale in July.

Romania's parliament still needs to approve the purchase.

cw/kms (AP, Reuters)