Europe aims to rely less on US defence after Trump's Greenland push
European defence spending has risen nearly 80% since the Ukraine war began as leaders seek greater strategic autonomy amid concerns over U.S. commitment, officials said.
- European leaders pledged to accelerate efforts to boost their own defences and rely less on the U.S., while Friedrich Merz, Emmanuel Macron and Keir Starmer committed to a stronger European pillar within NATO.
- President Donald Trump's Greenland push sharply raised doubts about Washington's commitment, and with the Ukraine war nearing its fifth year, European leaders said they must strengthen their own defences against Moscow.
- European defence ministers endorsed consortia and signed deals to develop the European Long‑range Strike Approach, with NATO members agreeing last year to raise core defence spending to 3.5% of GDP.
- The U.S. administration says it expects Europe to lead conventional defence while Washington retains its nuclear umbrella, with Merz beginning talks with Macron on a European deterrent.
- High‑profile pan‑European projects face work‑share disputes as Volodymyr Zelenskiy said weapons evolve faster than politics and Ukraine faced more than 6,000 drones and 150 missiles last month.
22 Articles
22 Articles
Tensions with US fueling push to empower euro as allies reject 'Trump-shaped world order'
At two major gatherings in Europe this year — the 2026 World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland in January and the 2026 Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany in February — tensions between the Trump Administration and Europe were a recurring theme. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, during his WEF speech, lamented that a "rupture" has occurred in relations between the United States and its North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NA…
European countries increased their defence spending by 80 per cent in four years.
Motivated by the fear of Russia and by the US President's calls, European countries have increased their defence costs
Europe aims to rely less on US defence after Trump's Greenland push
Donald Trump's push to annex Greenland sharpened European doubts about Washington’s commitment to protect the continent through NATO despite Marco Rubio's limited reassurances at the Munich Security Conference.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium













