Trump discusses potential US withdrawal from NATO alliance
President Trump has recently intensified discussions about potentially withdrawing the US from NATO following allies’ refusal to support US and Israeli military actions against Iran. These comments surfaced prominently after a White House meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on April 8, 2026, amid a fragile ceasefire in the Iran conflict.
Trump posted on Truth Social criticizing NATO for not aiding when the US needed help during the Strait of Hormuz blockade, while referencing Greenland in a provocative tone. He met Rutte to address alliance strains, with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stating NATO “failed” its test in the Iran war. Earlier interviews in early April saw Trump call NATO a “paper tiger” and affirm withdrawal is “beyond reconsideration.”
Reasons Cited
Trump’s frustration stems from European NATO members declining to join the US-Israel operations against Iran, despite his calls for automatic support. He has long pushed for higher defense spending from allies and views their inaction as proof of the alliance’s weakness.
Legal Hurdles
A 2023 US law prevents unilateral withdrawal; it requires two-thirds Senate approval or congressional action, making immediate exit unlikely. Initial US moves include pulling some officers from NATO structures and troops from Eastern Europe.
NATO’s Rutte defended Trump’s leadership post-meeting but warned Europe cannot defend itself without the US. Allies face heightened alarm, with Trump’s Greenland remarks reviving past tensions over the Danish territory.
