US remarks on NATO are pushing Europe to seek alternative security options, Spain says

Published 07 Apr, 2026 04:29pm 2 min read
German soldiers take part in a military drill during NATO’s Cold Response exercises near Bardufoss, in Arctic Norway. – Reuters
German soldiers take part in a military drill during NATO’s Cold Response exercises near Bardufoss, in Arctic Norway. – Reuters

Recent US complaints about NATO allies and threats to quit the ​alliance are pushing European countries to seek alternative security ‌arrangements, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said on Tuesday.

After European countries declined to send their navies to open up the Strait of Hormuz ​to global shipping following the start of the US-Israeli war on Iran on February 28, US President Donald Trump has ⁠declared he is considering withdrawing from the alliance, thrusting it into a crisis.

Albares said the decision was entirely up to Trump, ​but underscored that NATO allies stood in solidarity with Washington after the September 11, 2001, attacks.

“NATO is a mutually beneficial alliance for both Europeans ​and Americans … But the US administration’s remarks and new positions ​on Euro-Atlantic security are inviting us Europeans to take a leap in terms ‌of ⁠our sovereignty and defence matters,” Albares told La Sexta TV channel.

“We must take our citizens’ security and dissuasion into our own hands,” he added.

To do so, he said, the EU should ​advance toward a ​pan-European army ⁠and integrate its defence industries, but also create a digital single market and a capital markets ​union.

Spain’s leftist government has become one of the ​most vocal ⁠critics of the war on Iran, which it calls illegal and reckless. It has to involve US planes in the ⁠strikes ​and use jointly operated military ​bases in southern Spain. Trump has vowed to retaliate against Spain using trade ​tariffs.

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