Officials say they are “overwhelmed” by the scale of the task, according to the report
Europe’s NATO members are drawing up a plan to gradually replace the US as their key defense guarantor over the next five to ten years, the Financial Times reported on Thursday, citing sources.
The UK, France, Germany, and the Nordic nations are in talks about a potential proposal that would relocate the bloc’s financial burden back to Europe, four unnamed officials told the Financial Times.
The plan’s backers aim to present it to the US before NATO’s annual summit in The Hague this June, according to the report.
European NATO members fear that the US, under President Donald Trump, could renege on its defense commitments or leave the bloc altogether. While the talks are reportedly being framed as offering a managed, long-term transition, European officials have admitted to the FT that the timeline of five to ten years seems extremely ambitious.
“Increasing spending is the only play that we have: burden sharing and shifting the dial away from US reliance,” one official told the FT. “We’re starting those talks, but it’s such a big task that many are overwhelmed by the scale of it.”
According to the paper, the plan could include increased defense spending and ramping up military capabilities, which could convince Trump to agree to a gradual transfer of responsibilities, rather than a sudden exit.
Some European countries are said to be reluctant to support the talks at all, fearing they could encourage a rapid US exit. Others doubt Washington would agree to a structured transfer of responsibilities, given the “unpredictable nature” of the Trump administration.
Trump has demanded that NATO members raise defense spending to 5% of GDP – more than double the alliance’s 2% target. US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has said that the country “will no longer tolerate an imbalanced relationship” with its allies, stressing that Washington “will prioritize empowering Europe to own responsibility for its own security.”
Earlier this month, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen urged the EU to create a “defense union.” The EU has also backed a plan known as ReArm Europe to mobilize up to €800 billion ($875 billion) in debt and tax breaks for the bloc’s military industrial complex.
Moscow has sharply criticized the EU’s plans to boost military spending, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov calling the buildup “a matter of deep concern.” He has insisted that the measures “are primarily aimed at Russia” and threaten to undermine peace efforts with Ukraine.