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At NATO summit, anxious Europeans extend a hand to placate Trump

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Yves Herman/Reuters
Members of the Dutch army patrol ahead of the NATO summit at The Hague, Netherlands, June 23, 2025.

Early in President Donald Trump鈥檚 second term, European leaders and many U.S. defense and security experts were anticipating this week鈥檚 NATO summit with foreboding.

Would Mr. Trump, who had expressed hostility and disdain for the transatlantic alliance in his first term 鈥 even musing about pulling the United States out 鈥 make good on his threats? Might 2025 be the year that the American security blanket wrapped around Europe since World War II unraveled?

But as NATO leaders gather at The Hague for a two-day summit beginning Tuesday, the deep worries have been replaced by an 鈥渙of鈥 of relief 鈥 or at least a 鈥淪o far, so good.鈥

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Despite some tensions over Iran, and disagreements over Ukraine, European members of NATO think they can deliver enough of what President Donald Trump wants to keep him committed to the alliance and to European security.

No one thinks sunshine has replaced all the clouds hanging over the transatlantic partnership. And now Mr. Trump鈥檚 decision to attack Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend will add some tension to the proceedings, as the action runs counter to European preferences for a diplomatic solution over Iran鈥檚 nuclear program.

But there is a sense that the summit will appease Mr. Trump enough to keep the U.S. at the helm of European defense, for now.

鈥淭his summit is organized around minimizing the risks of an existential crisis over the question of the U.S. commitment to Europe,鈥 says Robert Hunter, U.S. ambassador to NATO in the immediate post-Cold War period. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l give Trump things he can take home and say, 鈥業 barked and look what I got!鈥欌 he adds. 鈥淏ut the ghost at the banquet is still going to be whether the president of the United States is truly committed to NATO.鈥

Multilateralism and Iran strikes

Europeans鈥 questions about just how committed President Trump is to the kind of multilateralism the alliance embodies will likely be intensified by the airstrikes on Iran.

Mr. Trump鈥檚 suggestion last week that he would hold off on any decision for two weeks, in part to give diplomacy a chance to work, was reassuring to Europeans, says Seth Jones, president of the Defense and Security Department at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Virginia Mayo/AP
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte addresses reporters prior to a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group at NATO headquarters in Brussels, June 4, 2025. Amid deep disagreements now between the U.S. and Europe, diplomats say Ukraine will not even be mentioned in the summit's declaration.

In a similar way, so now should be the president鈥檚 argument that he acted to avoid a larger war. A number of European officials said they were assured by administration contacts that the airstrikes aimed to make serious diplomacy possible.

鈥淚f you look at the statements of a number of European leaders, they do not want an Iranian bomb,鈥 Dr. Jones says. 鈥淪o I think the president ... giving diplomacy a chance and [being] concerned about getting the U.S. involved in a war in the Middle East ... actually helps.鈥

The gathering is set to confirm action and steps forward on two issues at the heart of Mr. Trump鈥檚 criticism of NATO: low defense spending by many member countries, and the need for a wealthy Europe to do more for its own defense.

The summit will confirm new defense spending targets that go well beyond the famous 鈥2% of GDP鈥 agreed to in 2014. Mr. Trump in his first term angrily noted that was a commitment not being kept by many members.

By the end of last year, nearly two dozen of NATO鈥檚 32 member states had hit the 2% goal, while NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte announced this month that 鈥渕ost, if not all鈥 members would reach or surpass the goal this year.

Now at the urging of the Trump administration, leaders are expected to set a new target of 5% of gross domestic product spending on defense by 2032 鈥 a relatively short time frame for NATO. The new target would be divided between a 3.5% goal for core defense spending, and 1.5% for improvements to civilian infrastructure like roads and communications systems the military could use in emergencies.

Some analysts describe the two-part 5% goal as 鈥渇uzzy math鈥 concocted to appease President Trump 鈥 while others note that the U.S. does not currently meet the 3.5% of GDP goal, as U.S. defense spending as a percentage of GDP has been falling.

Moreover, the summit will underscore an emerging division of labor 鈥 one the Trump administration has pressed for 鈥 under which Europe takes on greater responsibility for its own defense, while the U.S. turns its attention increasingly to the Asia-Pacific.

Range of Trump administration views

No one is predicting that the meetings at The Hague, with the traditional leaders鈥 鈥渇amily photo鈥 and an opening dinner for leaders hosted by King Willem-Alexander and Queen M谩xima of the Netherlands, will now be a transatlantic love fest. European doubts about America鈥檚 long-term commitment to the alliance run deep, while the messaging from an administration divided over Europe鈥檚 salience to U.S. national security has hardly been reassuring.

鈥淭he big question that ... casts a big shadow around the summit [is] how committed to the alliance is the United States,鈥 says Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. 鈥淭here is ... not a coherent view coming from the Trump administration about how it sees NATO. So right now, Europeans can see what they want from the United States.鈥

Virginia Mayo/AP
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth prepares to take his seat during a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels, June 5, 2025.

Europeans can choose, he says, from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth鈥檚 emphasis to his NATO colleagues earlier this year on burden-sharing 鈥 with Europe looking out more for its own defense 鈥 or from Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying essentially that the U.S. remains committed to the alliance as long as Europeans step up and spend more.

Finally, Mr. Bergmann says, there is the perspective of Vice President JD Vance that shocked Europeans in February when he questioned in a Munich speech whether the U.S. and Europe still share the same values.

He refers to a Vance 鈥渃amp ... where there鈥檚 a real hostility towards the NATO alliance.鈥

Still, most expect a summit designed to placate Mr. Trump and showcase unity will come off smoothly, although there are still potential hitches.

One is Ukraine.

President Trump ghosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at a recent G7 summit in Canada, and the two leaders are not expected to meet formally at The Hague. There will be no leaders-level meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council, which will take place instead among foreign ministers.

It鈥檚 a rude comedown for Mr. Zelenskyy, who was a star of last year鈥檚 NATO summit in Washington, where President Joe Biden hailed Ukraine as a bulwark of European security.

The Washington summit鈥檚 declaration highlighted NATO support for Ukraine. This year, Ukraine will not even rate a mention, diplomats say.

鈥淭here鈥檚 not going to be much said on Ukraine,鈥 says Kurt Volker, a former NATO ambassador who served as special representative for Ukraine in the first Trump term. 鈥淭he real issue is that the U.S. does not see Ukrainian security as essential to European security, and our European allies do,鈥 he says.

Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press/AP
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney walks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to a morning session at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Alberta, June 17, 2025. Mr. Zelenskyy is not scheduled to meet with President Trump at the NATO summit.

The Europeans see Russian President Vladimir Putin prevailing in Ukraine as 鈥渁 big security threat for Europe and NATO,鈥 he adds, while 鈥淭he U.S. simply doesn鈥檛 see it that way.鈥

Is Trump committed?

Some worry that an unpredictable U.S. president could still upend the summit: by departing early, as he did from the G7 gathering, or by saying something that shatters the sense of unity (which is one reason NATO planners have not scheduled the traditional joint U.S. president-NATO secretary-general press conference).

The prevailing feeling is that Mr. Trump could hardly walk away from or spoil a party that will present him with the very gifts he has asked for.

But others say that while all the careful choreography may preclude a disaster, it will also leave unanswered the key question that NATO leaders will have top of mind.

鈥淲hat the Europeans want to know is if the United States, if President Trump is fully committed to our NATO allies,鈥 says Ambassador Hunter. 鈥淭hey want to know, If Russia does something that is recognizable as an aggression against a NATO ally, will Trump come to that ally鈥檚 defense?鈥

But no one will ask the question, he says, 鈥渂ecause they know there鈥檚 a real risk they won鈥檛 get the right answer.鈥

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