Washington's territorial ambitions fracture NATO's transatlantic shield

Some 1,500 American paratroopers quietly left a strategic base near the Ukrainian border last October, raising alarms in Romania about NATO's cohesion. As defence ministers prepare to meet in Brussels on February 12, the alliance faces a trust crisis amid tensions over Greenland and shifting US priorities. This fracture signals erosion in the Article 5 collective defence guarantee.

The story began with those quiet withdrawals of 1,500 American paratroopers from a Romanian base near the Ukrainian border, appearing as a fissure in NATO's transatlantic foundation. For decades, the alliance has relied on Article 5's promise: an attack on one is an attack on all. Today, territorial disputes and political rhetoric threaten that bond.

The core tension revolves around Greenland, where renewed US interest in acquisition challenges NATO's principle of sovereign equality. Sophia Besch, a senior fellow at Carnegie Europe, states: “This episode is significant because it crossed an invisible line.” US Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Lisa Murkowski warned that such suggestions signal instability, emboldening adversaries.

To bolster independence, European nations and Canada agreed in July 2025 to allocate 5% of GDP to defence by 2035, including 3.5% for core military needs and 1.5% for security infrastructure like bridges and ports. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte praised these moves but avoided comment on the Greenland dispute.

The Kremlin has not missed these cracks; Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called it a “major disorder in Europe.” EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas cautioned against ongoing Russian threats, including cyberattacks and sabotage. With the February 12 meeting focusing on High North security, the question lingers: can NATO overcome its internal rifts? In his year-end address, Rutte recalled that Russia has brought large-scale war back to the continent.

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Danish soldiers arriving in Greenland to reinforce defenses amid NATO tensions with the US.
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Denmark reinforces Greenland with troops and seeks NATO support

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Denmark is sending more troops to Greenland and proposing a NATO mission around the island to counter US demands to take over the territory. Sweden is ready to contribute, while European leaders criticize Donald Trump's tariff threats. Tensions within NATO are being tested, but the alliance's core holds according to Defense Minister Pål Jonson.

NATO事務総長のマーク・ルッテ氏は、欧州は米国の軍事支援なしには自衛能力を欠いており、独立を達成するには支出を大幅に増やす必要があると述べた。ブリュッセルで欧州連合(EU)の議員らに語った際、同氏は欧州と米国の相互依存を強調した。ルッテ氏は欧州の自立という考えを非現実的だと退けた。

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German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius considers US President Donald Trump still unpredictable despite a recent Greenland deal. He advises Europe not to succumb to fear but to focus on building its own strength. The US is as dependent on Europe as Europe is on the US.

At the summit in Paris, representatives from 35 countries have concretized plans for an international protection force and binding security assurances for Ukraine following a possible ceasefire. The Paris Declaration provides for support in the event of a renewed Russian attack, including possible troop deployments. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has signaled the involvement of German soldiers.

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US President Donald Trump has threatened eight European countries, including Sweden, with 10 percent tariffs starting February 1 after they sent military personnel to an exercise on Greenland. The EU is calling an emergency summit on Thursday to discuss the response, while considering retaliatory tariffs worth nearly 1,000 billion kronor.

Despite Donald Trump's threatening rhetoric against Denmark, neither the Swedish government nor the Armed Forces have a plan for a potential US withdrawal from NATO. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson emphasizes that Sweden has a plan for security in a more dangerous time. The statement was made at the security conference in Sälen.

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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte has spoken with US President Donald Trump about the security situation in Greenland and the Arctic. Rutte announced this on the platform X and looks forward to meeting Trump in Davos later this week. The conversation comes amid Trump's threats of tariffs against several countries, including Sweden and Denmark, if the US is not allowed to take over Greenland.

 

 

 

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