❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Secretary of War Pete Hegseth called the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
a “paper tiger” while announcing
a six-month review of U.S presence in Europe. 📺 DETAIL: Addressing NATO officials at the organization’s Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on Thursday, Secretary Hegseth criticized the
decline of Europe’s military capabilities. Dubbing the period “NATO 2.0,” the Secretary of War characterized Europe’s decline as reflecting a crisis of faith and an era of
“freeloading” on U.S. military power. “Defense budgets cratered, along with Europe’s belief in itself and its civilization. NATO lost its way… NATO 2.0 was an era of
distraction, deindustrialization, and demilitarization. It was an era of freeriding,
and those were lost years that we’re not going back to.” The Secretary of War then introduced the concept of “NATO 3.0,” a vision for the alliance to reclaim its Cold War-era strength by requiring members to meet higher defense spending thresholds,
potentially five percent of GDP by 2035. Secretary Hegseth called on NATO to become a
“hard-edged warfighting organization” once again, before
warning that there would be consequences if European leaders did not make an effort to improve the continent’s defense capabilities. He proceeded to
announce a six-month review of U.S. force posture in Europe. “So we’re doubling down on our effort to make NATO what it was always supposed to be, a balanced alliance with Europe in the lead for its own defense.
NATO 3.0. And to make that a reality, I am announcing today a six-month Department of War review that will examine
America’s force posture and basing in Europe… could be less,” declared Hegseth. “It’s a review that
some countries will fail, and others will pass with flying colors,” he added.
📺 FLASHBACK: The Secretary of War’s characterization of the organization
echoes rhetoric from President Donald J. Trump. Back in April, the President also
referred to NATO as a “
paper tiger.” The upcoming review represents the culmination of the administration’s
criticism of fellow NATO members. Also in April, the United States’ NATO Ambassador, Matthew Whitaker, confirmed that the administration was reassessing its stance towards Europe amid concerns over burden-sharing. “I think that it’s very clear right now that President Trump is evaluating and reevaluating everything,” said
Whitaker at the time.