As Trump rails against NATO, secretary general heads to D.C.
During his second term, he has gone much further, shocking allies by saying he might use military force to take Greenland. There was so much concern that Danish soldiers were sent to Greenland with explosives, prepared to blow up two critical airport runways should Trump choose to follow through on his threats, according to two European officials. It didnโt happen. The Danish government declined to comment on the precautionary measures, which were first reported by the Danish outlet DR.
Trump walked those comments back at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, this year, but during his time there he pressured Denmark and Europe to hand over what he called a โpiece of ice.โ
Western diplomats say the episode was a watershed for U.S. allies, who concluded that America could no longer be fully trusted as a reliable partner. The rift over the war against Iran and Trumpโs bullying over trade have only reinforced NATO membersโ perception that they must steer their own course and wean themselves off of U.S.-made weapons and technology.
The U.S.-NATO relationship was already strained by divisions in the approach to ending Russiaโs war in Ukraine. While Europe sees helping Ukraine beat back Russia as the top security priority, Trump bluntly said as recently as last week, โUkraineโs not our war.โ
Trump halted direct military aid to Ukraine when he returned to the White House last year and has appeared to side with Russia in peace talks, which raised concerns in European governments that they could no longer dismiss his criticism of NATO as mere rhetoric. His actions showed that the U.S. was unwilling to support the alliance against its main threat โ Russia, according to Western officials.

The U.S. also eased sanctions on Russian oil to counter rising prices after Iran blockaded the Strait of Hormuz despite Europeโs insistence that the pressure on Moscow should be increased to help end the Ukraine conflict. The Trump administration has also made it clear that U.S. weapons Ukraine urgently needs will be diverted if necessary to fight the war in the Middle East.
โI do think something fundamental has broken in the alliance, and it will be very hard to restore, not impossible, but very difficult,โ Daalder said.
Rutte, who has the increasingly difficult task of holding the 32-nation alliance together, is well known for lavishing praise on Trump โ even having once referred to him as โDaddy.โ Sometimes referred to as the Trump whisperer, Rutte has been both applauded and criticized for his approach to handling Trump.
Even though the U.S. kept NATO allies in the dark ahead of the war in Iran, Rutte has publicly defended the U.S. military operations, saying what Trump is doing would โmake the whole world safer.โ
โIf Iran would have the nuclear capability, including, together, with the missile capability, it will be a direct threat, an existential threat, to Israel, to the region, to Europe, to the stability in the world,โ he told CBS News in an interview last month. โSo the president doing this is crucial.โ
But Rutte has also acknowledged his personal approach to Trump hasnโt always been well-received.
โI hear the criticism, obviously. Iโm not deaf,โ he said in a recent interview with Reuters.
Trumpโs comments about NATO alliesโ reluctance to get involved in the Iran war, particularly to secure the Strait of Hormuz, have prompted some public spats within the alliance.
โThe countries of the world that do receive oil through the Hormuz Strait must take care of that passage,โ Trump said in an address to the nation Wednesday night after he told the Telegraph, which asked whether heโd reconsider U.S. membership: โOh yes, I would say [itโs] beyond reconsideration. I was never swayed by NATO.โ
Not long after, Finnish President Alexander Stubb posted a message on X that heโd spoken with Trump, writing: โConstructive discussion and exchange of ideas on Nato, Ukraine and Iran. Problems are there to be solved, pragmatically.โ
Lithuania and Estonia publicly extolled the importance and value of the U.S. as members of the alliance. Others were less pragmatic.
โThe threat of NATOโs break-up, easing sanctions on Russia, a massive energy crisis in Europe, halting aid for Ukraine … it all looks like Putinโs dream plan,โ Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said, โNATO is the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen, and it has kept us safe for many decades, and we are fully committed to NATO.โ
Starmer has been a lightning rod for Trumpโs personal attacks. Trump has dismissed him as โnot Winston Churchillโ for the U.K.โs reluctance to involve itself in the war. Starmer dismissed the attacks this week, saying, โWhatever the pressure on me and others, whatever the noise, Iโm going to act in the British national interest in all the decisions that I make.โ
โAnd thatโs why Iโve been absolutely clear that this is not our war or we are not going to get dragged into it,โ he said.
