The Pentagon has launched a six-month review of its NATO force posture, a move that leaves European capitals scrambling to assess their own defense vulnerabilities. While Secretary General Mark Rutte attempts to project stability, insisting the U.S. nuclear umbrella remains secure, the reality for many member states is stark: the review targets the very capabilities they currently lack. Hegseth made it clear that the era of open-ended U.S. support has ended, explicitly stating that American financial and military contributions will now be strictly contingent on allies meeting their defense spending targets.
In section EU
Hegseth Puts NATO on Notice as Force Review Looms
Conflict erupted in Brussels this week as U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth slammed European allies for their lack of support regarding the war with Iran. Branding their conduct "shameful," Hegseth signaled a fundamental shift in Washington's commitment to the alliance, tying future American military presence to rigid new spending conditions.

With the upcoming Ankara summit just three weeks away, pressure is mounting for governments to provide concrete, credible plans to satisfy Washington’s demands. While Rutte notes that European and Canadian defense spending has climbed by $90 billion over the past year, the gap remains wide. Countries like Slovenia, Albania, and the Czech Republic have yet to reach the 2% GDP benchmark, while the United Kingdom, Italy, and Hungary face grueling fiscal trade-offs to hit the 3.5% target for core military spending. NATO’s credibility now hinges entirely on whether these nations can move from rhetoric to reality before the Ankara deadline.
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