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NATO At The Crossroads: What Now?

News Image By PNW Staff April 09, 2026
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For decades, NATO has been the cornerstone of transatlantic security. The United States has been the alliance's engine, supplying funding, troops, and strategic reach that no other member can match. In return, Europe promised partnership -- not perfect alignment, but reliability.

That compact was tested, and in many ways strained, during Operation Epic Fury in Iran. As U.S. forces prepared to act, several European allies restricted access to bases, limited overflights, or imposed operational conditions. Some stayed on the sidelines, arguing that Iran was not their war. From Washington's perspective, it looked like allies had abandoned the United States at the very moment it needed support. From European capitals, the hesitation reflected domestic politics, public opinion, and a long-standing debate about when Europe should intervene militarily abroad.

The tension is real, and it goes beyond rhetoric. The U.S. spends roughly 3.2% of GDP on defense, vastly outpacing most NATO members. Germany, France, and the U.K., despite their political clout, typically hover near the 2% guideline. For decades, American policymakers have urged Europe to spend more, modernize forces, and assume a larger share of operational responsibility. Yet even with gradual improvements, frustration in Washington has reached a boiling point.


So, what does the U.S. get out of the alliance? A lot. Forward bases across Europe give American forces rapid access to multiple theaters -- the Middle East, Africa, the Mediterranean, and Eastern Europe. NATO allows the U.S. to share intelligence, train with allies, and maintain interoperability that multiplies operational effectiveness. These advantages are real, tangible, and critical for both deterrence and global power projection.

Yet the Iran episode raises a thorny question: should an ally be expected to fully support every operation, even one outside their immediate interest, or is partnership more about reliability in principle than agreement in every detail? Europe said "this is not our war," but in another context, these same countries expect U.S. support in conflicts like Ukraine. The dissonance illustrates a fundamental tension in alliances: partners may not always agree on objectives, but they are expected to stand together when stakes are high.

Now comes the speculation everyone is waiting for: what happens next? Washington is reportedly considering several options. One is strategic realignment -- reducing U.S. troop presence in countries perceived as less supportive while bolstering forces in reliable allies such as Poland, Romania, the Baltics, and perhaps Greece. Bases in Spain, Germany, or Italy could face closures, repurposing, or reduced operational access. These moves would send a clear signal about expectations and reliability, without severing the alliance entirely.

There are clear benefits and risks on both sides. Maintaining U.S. forces across all of Europe keeps deterrence strong, ensures rapid response capability, and preserves diplomatic cohesion. Pulling back from some regions could incentivize greater European defense spending and more thoughtful burden-sharing, but it risks eroding trust, creating operational gaps, and signaling vulnerability to adversaries.

A more extreme scenario -- a partial or full U.S. withdrawal from NATO -- would be seismic. NATO without America is still an organization of armies and flags, but it loses the overwhelming logistical backbone, intelligence networks, and strategic credibility that only the U.S. provides. That could embolden adversaries and force Europe to reassess its own capabilities in ways that are politically and militarily fraught.


At the same time, Europe is not the enemy. Its caution is rooted in domestic politics including the reality of a growing Muslim population, historical experience, and a desire to avoid unnecessary conflict. Allies have legitimate reasons to differentiate between threats that directly endanger them and operations that are more peripheral. The challenge is reconciling those perspectives with America's expectations of alliance reliability.

NATO's Next Move: Three Possible Futures

1. Status Quo - Keep the Footprint, Accept Frustrations

What Happens: U.S. forces remain stationed across Europe as they are now. Operations continue with the same European allies, even if some are hesitant.
Pros: Maintains deterrence; preserves bases, intelligence networks, and rapid response; keeps diplomatic channels open.
Cons: Frustration in Washington grows; U.S. continues to bear the lion's share of costs; operational flexibility may be limited if allies impose restrictions in future conflicts.
Speculative What-Ifs: Iran-like scenarios repeat, forcing U.S. troops to act largely alone; Russia tests NATO's eastern flank; China expands influence in Africa and the Middle East with limited European pushback.

2. Strategic Realignment - Focus on Cooperative Allies

What Happens: The U.S. shifts troops to countries with strong operational support (Poland, Romania, the Baltics, Greece). Bases in Germany, Italy, or Spain face reduced roles or closures.
Pros: Encourages burden-sharing; rewards countries that actively support U.S. operations; increases flexibility and responsiveness.
Cons: Could create perception gaps in less supportive countries; risks operational disruption during realignment; may strain political ties without careful diplomacy.
Speculative What-Ifs: Allies seeing U.S. realignment accelerate defense spending; potential political tension with France, Germany, or Spain; new regional defense pacts emerge in response.


3. Partial Withdrawal - Rethink NATO Reliance

What Happens: The U.S. scales back its presence significantly, relying more on allies to step up or form regional defense arrangements. NATO's structure becomes less U.S.-centric.
Pros: Forces Europe to take more responsibility; reduces U.S. overextension; may reset expectations about shared risk.
Cons: Weakens NATO's deterrence credibility; could embolden adversaries; risks long-term diplomatic fallout; reduces rapid-response capabilities in critical regions.
Speculative What-Ifs: Europe struggles to coordinate without U.S. leadership; adversaries exploit gaps; U.S. pivot toward the Indo-Pacific accelerates, leaving a leadership vacuum in Europe.

Ultimately, the U.S. faces a critical choice: continue carrying the alliance in its current form, reshaping it quietly but pragmatically, or take bolder steps that force Europe to shoulder more of the burden -- whether through spending, capability, or political alignment. Each path carries risk, but inaction is not risk-free. America cannot continue operating as NATO's guarantor while frustration, disappointment, and strategic misalignment grow.

The Iran operation may be remembered not just as a test of military readiness, but as a reckoning for the transatlantic partnership itself. NATO may remain intact on paper, but the trust that binds it -- the trust that ensures collective defense when stakes are high -- will need deliberate rebuilding.

The question now is simple: can an alliance survive when partners do not fully agree on every mission, yet still rely on each other in moments of crisis? The answer will shape U.S.-European relations for decades, and define whether NATO remains a pillar of shared security -- or becomes a relic of assumptions the modern world no longer tolerates.



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