Europe Replaces Most U.S. Cuts Within NATO, Top Commander Says
Europe Replaces Most U.S. Cuts Within NATO, Commander Says

European NATO allies have mostly replaced the assets that the United States has cut from its rescue plans in case of a war in Europe, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe Sir John Stringer said in an interview with Bloomberg Television ahead of the alliance’s summit in Ankara next week.

Stringer, a former Royal Air Force fighter pilot, made the assurance as allies try to smooth over recent announcements by the U.S. signalling that it is pivoting away from the continent. "European allies have definitely stepped up in terms of backfilling the adjustment in the U.S. forces in Europe," he said, adding this was a demonstration of "a stronger Europe in a stronger NATO."

U.S. Cuts Prompt European Backfill

The U.S. recently announced massive cuts to the forces it would send to Europe in case of war or crisis, prompting NATO’s military command to ask European countries to make the forces they hadn’t yet committed to the alliance known. Stringer noted that in categories where Europe couldn’t provide equivalent forces, they would look to match the effect with different assets.

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Burden-sharing and burden-shifting "is now being done in a sensible, proportionate way, absolutely driven by military logic," he said, emphasizing the preparedness of European allies for the shift in U.S. priorities and commitments. The need to rebalance has been a factor for years and Europeans have stepped up, he added.

NATO Summit Amid U.S. Isolationist Rhetoric

Trump’s rhetoric toward NATO since his return to the White House has unnerved allies and prompted a rethink of defence spending in Europe. U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shocked allies at NATO headquarters in June by announcing a six-month review of the U.S. forces in Europe, a signal that more cuts may be ahead.

Colonel Martin L. O’Donnell, spokesperson at NATO’s military command, said that "in the air and maritime domain, Europeans can and have stepped up" and even gone beyond 100 per cent. In certain cases, European allies have the same kit or better equipment than the U.S. inventory, he added, citing the example of a type of F-16 fighter jet to be received by Bulgaria.

Defence Spending Targets and UK Commitment

Stringer was appointed as NATO’s second in command of operations in Europe this year as the alliance grapples with the war in Ukraine on its borders and an increasingly isolationist U.S. Asked about the recent resignation of British Defence Secretary John Healey over what he said was inadequate spending by the United Kingdom, Stringer said that "all the nations, all 32 agreed that they would get to 3.5 per cent by 2035 and have a credible path to get there."

"Nobody gets an opt out on that one," he said, referring to NATO’s target for governments to spend at least 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product on core defence. "That’s what we agreed and that obviously includes the U.K." Areas of investment announced by the U.K. in recent weeks are "absolutely aligned with where NATO sees our forces needing to go to be able to be credible in deterring and defending the billion people under the NATO umbrella," he said. "NATO will expect all nations, including the U.K., to live by their commitments."

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