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US Remarks on NATO Are Pushing Europe to Seek Alternative Security Options, Spain Says

MADRID, April 7 (Reuters) – Recent U.S. complaints ⁠about ⁠NATO allies and threats ⁠to quit the alliance are pushing European countries ​to seek alternative security arrangements, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares ‌said on Tuesday.

After European countries ‌declined to send their navies to open up the ⁠Strait of ⁠Hormuz to global shipping following the start of the U.S.-Israeli ​war on Iran on February 28,  U.S. President Donald Trump has declared he is considering withdrawing from the alliance, thrusting it into a ​crisis.

Albares said the decision was entirely up to Trump, but underscored ⁠that ⁠NATO allies stood in ⁠solidarity ​with Washington after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“NATO is a mutually beneficial ​alliance for both ⁠Europeans and Americans … But the U.S. administration’s remarks and new positions on Euro-Atlantic security are inviting us Europeans to take a leap in terms of our sovereignty and defence matters,” Albares told ⁠La Sexta TV channel.

“We must take our citizens’ security and ⁠dissuasion into our own hands,” he added.

To do so, he said, the EU should advance toward a pan-European army and integrate its defence industries, but also create a digital single market and a capital markets union.

Spain’s leftist government has become one of the most vocal critics of the war on Iran, which it calls  illegal and reckless. ⁠It has closed Spanish airspace to U.S. planes involved in the strikes and banned them from using jointly operated military bases in southern Spain. Trump has vowed to retaliate against ​Spain using trade tariffs.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by ​Charlie Devereux and ANdrei Khalip)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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