By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
Europe has been warned, and warned again.
Still, it has been reduced to a near-fainting fit — and,
in the case of one German official, actual tears — over the Trump
administration’s tough words about its deficient military spending and its
moves to begin negotiating on its own with Russia over the Ukraine war.
In response, French President Emmanuel Macron called an
emergency summit of European leaders, which his advisers insisted wasn’t an
emergency summit at all, but merely a rapidly assembled informal meeting.
Whatever the nomenclature, there are signs that Europe is
beginning to get the memo — or, more precisely, beginning to read a memo that
it’s been sent repeatedly for years and buried somewhere under piles of
documents celebrating its own so-called soft power.
Back in 2011, Europe received a stern talking-to from a
bumptious U.S. official who insisted that it faced “a dim if not dismal future”
and that NATO was headed for “irrelevance.”
This rude American was none other than President Barack
Obama’s defense secretary, Robert Gates. As a holdover from the George W. Bush
administration, Gates was a figure with unassailable bipartisan credentials,
and yet he sounded a little like Vice President JD Vance and Trump’s defense
secretary, Pete Hegseth.
“The blunt reality,” Gates said in his speech, “is that
there will be dwindling appetite and patience in the U.S. Congress — and in the
American body politic writ large — to expend increasingly precious funds on
behalf of nations that are apparently unwilling to devote the necessary
resources or make the necessary changes to be serious and capable partners in
their own defense.”
In the form of the second Trump administration, the
patience has dwindled to almost nothing.
Serious countries need serious militaries, and a military
alliance like NATO depends on the capabilities of its member countries. This is
so obvious that it should go without saying, but it’s been an inconvenient
truth for a Europe that has preferred to spend on everything else while relying
on the might of the United States for security and power projection.
NATO countries vowed, back in 2014, that they’d spend at
least 2 percent of GDP on defense, and yet only 23 of 32 NATO members have
reached the threshold. Poland and the Baltic states are among the top spenders,
while France and Germany barely make 2 percent, and Canada and Italy are
beneath it.
The trend has been upward but nowhere near adequate.
According to the New York Times, “There is consensus among officials and
analysts that Europe lacks crucial elements of defense like integrated air and
missile defense, long-range precision artillery and missiles, satellites, and
air-to-air refueling tankers.”
Is that all?
Trump is calling for 5 percent of GDP for NATO members,
which has all the hallmarks of a tactic to get Europe as high as possible even
if they don’t reach this benchmark (the U.S. itself spends about 3.4 percent).
NATO is planning to make 3 percent or 3.5 percent its goal later this year.
President Trump and his team prefer vinegar to honey in
making their case around the world. It may be needlessly abrasive, but there’s
no doubt that it gets people’s attention. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte
told member countries to stop “complaining” and come up with concrete, positive
ideas, while Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission,
said “Europe’s security is at a turning point” and Europe needs “an urgency
mindset” and “a surge of defense.”
Even if Trump were less insistent about spending and had
warmer feelings about the alliance, the fact is that the United States may at
some point be consumed with responding to a crisis in the Pacific, and Europe
will have to be prepared to defend its backyard regardless.
If Europe won’t spend more for the sake of its own
security or the good of the alliance, it should — when its embarrassing panic
subsides — at least do it out of self-respect.
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