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Hegseth attacks NATO allies and announces a review of US forces in Europe

18 June 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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U.S. De­fense Sec­re­tary Pe­te Hegseth lashed out at NA­TO al­lies on Thurs­day as he an­nounced a six-month Pen­ta­gon re­view of Amer­i­can forces in Eu­rope whose out­come will de­pend on how fast the Eu­ro­peans take re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for their own se­cu­ri­ty.

The re­view was yet an­oth­er sur­prise for Eu­ro­pean al­lies and Cana­da as they learn to deal with an in­creas­ing­ly un­pre­dictable al­ly. U.S. of­fi­cials and se­nior mil­i­tary of­fi­cers had promised to co­or­di­nate close­ly with the Eu­ro­peans as Amer­i­ca draws down.

In re­cent months, U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump and the Pen­ta­gon have sent con­flict­ing sig­nals about whether Amer­i­ca is re­duc­ing or in­creas­ing its mil­i­tary foot­print in Eu­rope, as well as threat­en­ing to an­nex Green­land, a semi­au­tonomous is­land that is part of al­ly Den­mark. Just weeks ago, the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion said that it would no longer pro­vide as much mil­i­tary sup­port should any NA­TO mem­ber come un­der at­tack.

“This will be a re­al re­view. It will be de­signed to en­sure that NA­TO is mov­ing fast and ir­re­versibly to­ward Eu­rope lead­ing, step­ping up to take pri­ma­ry re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for the de­fense of Eu­rope,” Hegseth told his NA­TO coun­ter­parts. “It’s a re­view that some coun­tries will fail and oth­ers will pass with fly­ing colours.”

Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Friedrich Merz lat­er said the al­lies have long been aware of U.S. plans to pull troops from Eu­rope at some point and that they must take care of their own se­cu­ri­ty.

“We know that we must do more and we are do­ing it,” Merz said.

Pub­lic dress­ing down over bases, gen­der and mi­gra­tion

In a fiery speech at NA­TO head­quar­ters in Brus­sels, Hegseth lam­bast­ed Eu­ro­pean al­lies for fail­ing to pro­vide U.S. forces ac­cess to bases in Eu­rope to launch at­tacks on Iran, call­ing it “shame­ful.”

“These al­lies, they put Amer­i­ca’s sons and daugh­ters, our sons and daugh­ters, at risk by deny­ing them the pre­dictable ac­cess, bas­ing and over­flight that nev­er should have been in ques­tion at all,” he said. The re­view would al­so as­sess whether the U.S. has full ac­cess and over­flight “when we need it.”

While de­fense min­is­ters and mil­i­tary of­fi­cers sat in si­lence, Hegseth railed against mi­gra­tion and gen­der equal­i­ty poli­cies in Eu­rope, in re­marks rem­i­nis­cent to those of Vice Pres­i­dent JD Vance in Feb­ru­ary last year that an­gered many Eu­ro­peans.

“In­stead of tanks and fight­ers and air de­fens­es, the fo­cus has been on gen­der eq­ui­ty and cli­mate change and de­fense aus­ter­i­ty. Eu­rope’s bor­ders flew wide open, wel­fare states ex­pand­ed, de­fense bud­gets cratered, along with Eu­rope’s be­lief in it­self and its civ­i­liza­tion,” Hegseth said.

Hegseth’s com­ments large­ly mis­char­ac­ter­ized Eu­ro­pean poli­cies to­day. On de­fense, Eu­ro­pean al­lies and Cana­da have launched an un­prece­dent­ed ef­fort to boost de­fense spend­ing and ex­pand their armed forces. NA­TO Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al Mark Rutte not­ed on Thurs­day that they spent $90 bil­lion more on de­fense last year, a 20% in­crease over 2024. And while Eu­rope ac­cept­ed large num­bers of mi­grants and asy­lum seek­ers more than a decade ago, most coun­tries have tight­ened their bor­ders since.

It does not au­gur well for a sum­mit of NA­TO lead­ers in Turkey on Ju­ly 7-8.

A rare and short vis­it to NA­TO

It was a rare vis­it to NA­TO by Hegseth, his first this year af­ter skip­ping a meet­ing in Feb­ru­ary. The Pen­ta­gon chief did not stay long, leav­ing well be­fore the gath­er­ing was over and hours be­fore Ukraine’s Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Ze­len­skyy was due to press al­lies for more weapons for his coun­try.

Speak­ing to re­porters at Brus­sels air­port be­fore fly­ing home, Hegseth said, “It was great to hear coun­try af­ter coun­try say, ‘We’re go­ing to meet our tar­get. We’re go­ing to meet our tar­get.’ There are still a few out­liers, and we will be clear with them as we do this re­view.”

NA­TO’s supreme al­lied com­man­der, an Amer­i­can, is work­ing on back­up plans to de­fend Eu­rope af­ter the U.S. sig­nalled on June 3 that it would no longer sup­ply an air­craft car­ri­er and sup­port ships, aer­i­al re­fu­elling planes and dozens of fight­er jets, among oth­er mil­i­tary as­sets, in a cri­sis.

The Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion in­sists that it needs to be able to plan for two si­mul­ta­ne­ous con­flicts and wants more mil­i­tary re­sources at hand should it clash with Chi­na in the In­do-Pa­cif­ic re­gion.

Un­der NA­TO’s col­lec­tive se­cu­ri­ty guar­an­tee – Ar­ti­cle 5 of its found­ing treaty – the 32 al­lies pledge that an at­tack on one of them will be con­sid­ered an at­tack on all. It does not oblige them to pro­vide mil­i­tary sup­port, al­though many like­ly would.

In essence, the Unit­ed States is scal­ing back how it might help should an al­ly trig­ger Ar­ti­cle 5.

U.S. nu­clear weapons will stay

The U.S. has by far NA­TO’s biggest armed forces. It does not in­tend to with­draw its nu­clear weapons in Eu­rope, which are key to NA­TO’s de­ter­rence. To un­der­score that point, NA­TO’s Nu­clear Plan­ning Group is­sued its first state­ment in 19 years af­ter Thurs­day’s meet­ing.

In the state­ment, it “re­called that the strate­gic nu­clear forces of the Al­liance re­main the supreme guar­an­tee of Al­lied se­cu­ri­ty and un­der­pin NA­TO’s ex­tend­ed de­ter­rence ar­chi­tec­ture.”

The min­is­ters “agreed to con­tin­ue en­hanc­ing NA­TO’s nu­clear de­ter­rence mis­sion by mod­ern­iz­ing NA­TO’s nu­clear ca­pa­bil­i­ties, strength­en­ing its nu­clear plan­ning ca­pac­i­ty, and adapt­ing to achieve its se­cu­ri­ty in­ter­ests.”

Rutte played down the im­pact of the U.S. de­ci­sion, say­ing that the NA­TO Force Mod­el – the sys­tem for or­ga­niz­ing what forces mem­ber coun­tries will pro­vide com­man­ders in times of peace, cri­sis or con­flict – is just “a plan­ning tool,” and not a re­flec­tion of what would ac­tu­al­ly hap­pen.

“If war breaks out, we will all max out what we need to do to make sure we can fight the war,” Rutte told re­porters. “In the plan­ning phase, it is im­por­tant to know what we can count on. What is in the­o­ry there.” —BRUS­SELS (AP)

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Sto­ry by LORNE COOK | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

Geir Moul­son in Berlin con­tributed to this re­port.