Trump Set to Unveil Bold Stance on NATO in Highly Anticipated Speech Tonight

Donald Trump has issued a stark warning, suggesting the possibility of the United States withdrawing from NATO. Such a move would effectively unravel the...
HomeAUTransatlantic Tensions Escalate: Trump's Latest NATO Critique Deepens Divide

Transatlantic Tensions Escalate: Trump’s Latest NATO Critique Deepens Divide

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While Trump’s talk of a possible NATO pull-out dates back years, the comments to Britain’s Telegraph newspaper, published on Wednesday, were among the clearest and most disparaging yet – suggesting the fracture has deepened perhaps to a point of no return.

When questioned about the possibility of revisiting US membership in the alliance following the conclusion of the conflict with Iran, Trump asserted, “Oh yes, I would say (it’s) beyond reconsideration.”

US President Donald Trump
US President Donald Trump said he is strongly considering pulling the US out of NATO, ratcheting up his criticism of European allies (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

NATO did not provide an immediate response when approached by The Associated Press for comment.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, addressing the situation, emphasized the UK’s unwavering support for NATO, describing it as “the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen.”

The war has put many European leaders under political strain, with the conflict being unpopular domestically and causing fuel prices to skyrocket due to Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical channel that facilitates roughly 20% of global oil trade.

“Regardless of the pressure on myself and others, or any external clamor, my decisions will be guided by the British national interest,” Starmer stated on Wednesday.

Keir Starmer
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, asked about the comment, said Britain was “fully committed to NATO”. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

Long-simmering tensions within the alliance have bubbled up again over the war. As energy prices have spiked, Trump has been desperate to get countries to send their ships to the Strait. He’s called his NATO allies “cowards,” pulling at any rhetorical lever he can to get help with the fallout of a war that no ally was consulted on or asked to take part in.

For years, Trump has berated America’s European allies, urging them to assume greater responsibility for their own security and spend more on defence. He has argued that the US has done more for them than the other way around.

A US pull-out would essentially spell the end of NATO, which flourished for decades under American leadership.

On Truth Social on Tuesday, Trump lashed out at countries “like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran,” and suggested they buy US oil or go to the Strait of Hormuz themselves “and just take it”.

He also wants allies to help fix damage from the war that they had no part in starting.

Strait of Hormuz
In a social media post, Trump suggested they buy US oil or go to the Strait of Hormuz themselves “and just take it”. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

The UK is working on plans that could help assuage Trump.

On Thursday, Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will host a virtual meeting of 35 countries that have signed up to help ensure security for shipping in the Strait after the war.

Starmer said military planners will also work on a post-war security plan for the strait.

The backdrop: NATO not on board to join US in war

NATO is built on Article 5 of its founding treaty, which pledges that an attack on any one member will be met with a response from them all.

As the Iran war has spread, missiles and drones have been fired toward NATO member Turkey and a British military base on Cyprus, fuelling speculation about what might prompt NATO to trigger its collective security guarantee and come to their rescue.

The alliance has not intervened or signalled any plan to. Secretary-General Mark Rutte – who has voiced support for Trump and America’s role in the alliance – has been focusing mostly on Russia’s war against Ukraine, which borders four NATO countries.
Mark Rutte
Secretary-General Mark Rutte – who has voiced support for Trump and America’s role in the alliance – has been focusing mostly on Russia’s war against Ukraine, which borders four NATO countries. (Simon Wohlfahrt/AFP/Getty Images via CNN Newsource)

NATO operates uniquely by consensus. All 32 countries must agree for it to take decisions, so political priorities play a role. Even invoking Article 5 requires agreement among the allies. Turkey or the UK cannot trigger it alone.

In the Mideast war, Trump has bristled at the across-the-board rejection from European and other allies, and even rival China, to help secure the Strait of Hormuz.

Many European Union and NATO member country leaders have fumed since the war’s outset on February 28 because they weren’t informed ahead of time, seen as a break with precedent.

Trump insisted he needed the element of surprise, and he spoke out about possible military action and visibly built up US forces in the region in the run-up to the war.

Rising voices, and tougher action, from Europe over the Mideast war

European leaders have called for the war to stop and want the United States and Iran to return to negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program, which America and Israel see as a threat.

The vocal opposition in Europe to Trump’s war against Iran has started to turn into action.

Spain — the most vocal critic in Europe — on Monday said it closed its airspace to US planes involved in the Iran war.

European leaders have called for the war to stop and want the United States and Iran to return to negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Early last month, France agreed to let the US Air Force use a base in southern France after receiving a “full guarantee” from the United States that planes not involved in carrying out strikes against Iran would land there.

Other countries have spoken out against it: Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Germany’s largely ceremonial president, last week called the aggression against Iran a “dangerous mistake” in violation of international law.

US relations with Europe had already soured in recent months over Trump’s call for Greenland — a semiautonomous territory of stalwart NATO ally Denmark — to become part of the United States, prompting many EU countries to rally behind Copenhagen.

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