Europe Must Prepare for Security Without America [View all]
European leaders face an unprecedented challenge: building continental defence whilst managing an unpredictable American president.
https://www.socialeurope.eu/europe-must-prepare-for-security-without-america

Russias illegal annexation of Crimea and subsequent full-scale invasion of Ukraine has brought urgent pressure to rebuild European security. The dramatic shift in US foreign and security policies with Donald Trumps return to the White House has intensified the burden on European governments to compensate for what has been Americas steadfast commitment to European safety for decades. As NATO members gathered in The Hague for their summit on 24-25 June 2025, NATO remains the primary framework for European security, with Americas role in enabling the alliance still crucial. Europeans cannot yet defend themselves alone, even if they were willing to try. The
declaration adopted in The Hague states the ironclad commitment to collective defence as enshrined in Article 5 of the Washington Treaty.
Yet given the profound and likely lasting reorientation of US policy towards Europe, Europeans would be wise to act decisively now. They must clear the path towards a continental security architecture that no longer depends on America. The collapse of mutual trust between much of Europe and the Trump administration has made meaningful engagement extremely difficult on such an existential issue. US and European interests, long broadly aligned, have suddenly and sharply divergedand will likely diverge further as rapid policy changes unfold in America, including challenges to democracys foundations. Since taking office, Trump has openly sided with Putin on Ukraine, set his sights on Greenland, launched a trade war against allies, undermined international organisations and treaties, and supported Europes illiberal political forces.
A security alliance need not rest on the value base that has anchored NATO for decades. But especially during wartime in Europe, the unpredictable and potentially hostile nature of US policies carries enormous political risks for European leaders. Pure self-interest demands that Europeans begin shaping their continents security future. Considerable thinking is already underway about reforming NATO and strengthening its European pillar. Christian Mölling and Thorben Schütz
argued earlier this year that Europeans must manage the inevitable transatlantic divorce and build their own European way of war. Giuseppe Spatafora
has outlined a roadmap for NATO reform in the Trump 2.0 era. Sven Biscop
goes further, detailing what thinking biga genuinely European security order without Americamight look like.
These discussions are also happening in European and other like-minded capitals, though less visibly given current dependence on US security guarantees. The NATO summit in The Hague represented one crucial piece of this complex European security puzzle. As long as Europe remains vulnerable without America, Europeans must work to keep Washington engaged whilst hoping for US cooperation in their long-overdue strategic shift. The focus on President Trumps demand for five percent of GDP investment in defence serves this purpose. However unrealistic for many NATO members, however politically challenging it proves domesticallyas Germanys divisive SPD manifesto recently demonstratedand however little it might impress Putin, this big number could prove a lifeline for Europeans transitioning towards rebuilding their continents security architecture.
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