A betrayal foretold: On the U.S. and NATO alliance
After Donald Trump’s taunts and threats, Europe will have to reimagine its security paradigm
The U.S. appears poised to break with 77 years of partnership with Western European nations under the security umbrella of NATO, especially after its President Donald Trump has said that he is “absolutely” considering withdrawing from the alliance, which in his view is a “paper tiger”. This and similar remarks by Mr. Trump have followed White House’s apparent frustration that European and other allies did not expediently send military assets into West Asia to assist the U.S. and Israel in their war campaign against Iran, particularly to secure safe passage for oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, currently under Tehran’s control. Mr. Trump has frequently complained about getting less from NATO than Washington was putting into it, saying recently to the media, “… it’s a one-way street”. He has further hinted that NATO may have become an ineffectual global force when he recently observed that Russian President Vladimir Putin also “knows” that NATO lacks teeth to defend its members — a comment that gains additional salience in the context of Moscow’s military aggression against Ukraine and its likely further military adventurism in the Baltic states region.