Pentagon Proposes Suspending NATO Members Over Iran War
The Pentagon circulated an internal email proposing punitive measures against NATO members who declined to support the United States’ war with Iran, according to Reuters citing an unnamed U.S. government official. The Department of Defense considered suspending Spain from the transatlantic alliance and reevaluating the United Kingdom’s claim to the Falkland Islands as retaliation for countries refusing to grant U.S. access to their bases or airspace. Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson stated that the administration would ensure allies “are no longer a paper tiger” and perform their obligations, offering no further comment on internal deliberations.
NATO’s founding treaty contains no provision for suspending membership, according to a NATO official who spoke to Reuters. Trump has repeatedly threatened to leave NATO over grievances unrelated to the Iran conflict, including his desire to acquire Greenland and complaints that member nations would not help reopen the Strait of Hormuz. In April, Trump told Reuters he was “absolutely, without question” considering withdrawing from the alliance.
Suspending NATO members would require congressional approval or Trump invoking presidential authority over foreign policy, both actions likely to face legal challenges. Taking punitive action against allied nations would generate domestic and international backlash, yet Trump has demonstrated little respect for long-standing alliances and readily dismantles them when he perceives himself slighted.