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With US support uncertain, Europe builds better defenses

In the run-up last month to NATO’s largest military exercises since the Cold War, a top European commander was asked what might happen if the United States quits the alliance, as Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump appears apt to do.

“I have absolutely no doubt that our biggest ally will remain committed,” German Brig. Gen. Gunnar Bruegner, who leads training exercises for NATO’s Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, insisted. 

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Faced with shaky Western support for Ukraine and NATO, European leaders are taking steps to demonstrate they can defend themselves, even if less aid flows from the United States.

Confidence in America’s military reliability remains NATO’s public default and bedrock. But in the face of wavering Western support for Ukraine and an uncertain U.S. election, the alliance has been using these war games to suss out and strengthen its shortfalls.

Several NATO countries are also increasing military budgets: By the end of 2023, only 11 of 31 members contributed at least 2% of their gross domestic product to defense spending. Seven more countries will hit the 2% mark in 2024. 

These are key steps, analysts say, in bolstering the credibility of the alliance that might have to survive without U.S. backing. 

“Europe should have the means to defend itself, in the event that 1-800-Uncle Sam fails to get a response,” says Rajan Menon, a program director at Defense Priorities, a think tank that advocates for more restrained U.S. foreign policy.

In the run-up last month to NATO’s largest military exercises since the Cold War, a top European commander was asked what might happen if the United States quits the alliance, as Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump appears apt to do.

“I have absolutely no doubt that our biggest ally will remain committed,” insisted German Brig. Gen. Gunnar Bruegner, who leads training exercises for NATO’s Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe. 

Confidence in America’s military reliability remains NATO’s public default and its bedrock. But in the face of wavering Western support for Ukraine and an uncertain U.S. election, the alliance has been using these war games to suss out and strengthen its shortfalls.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Faced with shaky Western support for Ukraine and NATO, European leaders are taking steps to demonstrate they can defend themselves, even if less aid flows from the United States.

These are key steps, analysts say, in bolstering the credibility of an alliance that might one day have to survive without U.S. backing. 

Earlier this month, in a small Polish town south of Gdansk, waves of tanks from France, Germany, Spain, and Turkey, among other member nations, crossed Poland’s longest river, the Vistula, on floating bridges designed to test how quickly the alliance can speed reinforcements to the east in the event of a Russian invasion.

“NATO’s really picked up their game to go, ‘How do we get together more? How do we take the lessons learned that we’ve been talking about and understand the challenges?’” says American Maj. Gen. Randolph Staudenraus, a NATO operations specialist, surveying the scene from the riverbank. “We want to be a better fighting force.”

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