European stock markets saw volatility spike following Trump’s remarks to The Daily Telegraph, in which he called NATO a “paper tiger” and said withdrawal was “beyond reconsideration.” Defense company shares across France, Germany, Poland, and Sweden climbed sharply as investors priced in the likelihood that European governments would need to dramatically increase sovereign defense spending if American security guarantees became uncertain.
The euro fell modestly against the dollar on the news before partially recovering, as currency traders assessed the longer-term implications for European geopolitical risk. Bond markets in Eastern European nations, which sit closest to Russia and depend most heavily on NATO’s Article 5 collective defense guarantee, showed signs of stress.
NATO currently has 32 member states. The United States has been its military anchor since the alliance’s founding in April 1949. American forces stationed in Europe number in the tens of thousands, including roughly 37,000 in Germany alone. Trump has been reported to be considering pulling those troops out as part of a broader restructuring.
The trigger for Trump’s sharpest NATO criticism is the refusal by allies to support the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran. Several NATO members denied American aircraft permission to use their bases for strikes on Iranian targets, citing concerns about legality and the risk of broader regional escalation. Trump characterized this as a betrayal.
Legal analysts across major American universities are united in one assessment: withdrawing the United States from NATO without congressional approval would face immediate and severe legal challenge. A 2023 law that then-Senator Marco Rubio co-sponsored explicitly bars a president from acting alone, and the process would require a one-year notice period, giving courts time to rule. Whether the Supreme Court’s current conservative majority would ultimately side with executive power remains the defining unknown.
What is already certain is the political damage. Strategic adversaries from Moscow to Beijing are watching the transatlantic alliance wobble in real time.
