Trump Calls NATO Allies "Cowards" Over Refusal to Help in Hormuz

US President Donald Trump has dramatically widened the rift with NATO by labeling member nations "cowards" for refusing to assist in opening the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz. The strait has been choked by Iran following a conflict sparked by the US entering a war aligned with Israel without consulting its allies. European leaders, like France's Emmanuel Macron, have declared they are not party to the conflict and will not participate in military operations to open the strait. This stance threatens the core of the NATO alliance as Trump focuses on Middle East priorities while criticizing European defense efforts in Ukraine.

Key Points: Trump Widens NATO Rift, Labels Allies "Cowards" on Iran War

  • Trump calls NATO allies "cowards"
  • Allies refuse to open Strait of Hormuz
  • Conflict stems from US war with Iran
  • Trump threatens NATO's foundational unity
  • US bears disproportionate NATO budget share
3 min read

US-NATO rift widens as Trump calls allies 'cowards'

US President Donald Trump escalates feud with NATO, calling members "cowards" for refusing to help open the Strait of Hormuz amid the Iran conflict.

"Without the USA, NATO IS A PAPER TIGER - Donald Trump"

New York, March 20

The rift between US President Donald Trump and NATO deepened on Friday as he called members of the pact "cowards" and warned that he would "remember" their refusal to help open the Strait of Hormuz.

"Without the USA, NATO IS A PAPER TIGER," he wrote on Truth Social.

He said NATO allies complain about high oil prices but refuse to help open the Strait of Hormuz, which he described as a simple military manoeuvre and the single reason for high prices.

Trump's stance threatens to unravel NATO, the bulwark of collective Western defence since World War II. He has vacillated on the roles of allies while hurling insults.

On Tuesday, he declared, "We don't need any help, actually," but also sought assistance, at least in the form of minesweepers to keep the strait navigable.

As the Iran war spiralled beyond expectations, Tehran put a chokehold on the strait, about 40 kilometres wide, through which 20 per cent of the world's energy passes, creating a global shortage of oil and gas. Energy prices have risen worldwide, including in the US, hitting Trump's affordability agenda.

Trump called for NATO help to secure the strait after entering the war, aligned with Israel and without consulting allies, initially refusing Britain's offer to send aircraft carriers. European allies have described the Iran conflict as a war of choice, not a defensive operation.

France's President Emmanuel Macron said, "We are not party to the conflict and therefore France will never take part in operations to open or liberate the Strait of Hormuz in the current context."

On Tuesday, Trump said, "The United States has been informed by most of our NATO 'Allies' that they don't want to get involved with our Military Operation against the Terrorist Regime of Iran."

The US pays a proportionately higher share of NATO's $3.3 billion budget, contributing 16 per cent.

Trump has long complained that NATO does not do its part in joint defence and has demanded that members raise defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP. Except for Spain, NATO members have agreed to the target.

Besides plunging into the Iran conflict without consulting allies, NATO members see the war as not involving them militarily, as their primary concern is Europe's security, endangered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Trump, however, is focused on priorities in the Middle East and Latin America, even as he has threatened to invade NATO members Canada and Denmark to seize Greenland.

He has criticised Europe's defence of Ukraine and repeatedly accused Kyiv of failing to make a deal with Russia to end the war, now in its fourth year.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Calling allies cowards is so disrespectful. But honestly, he has a point about burden-sharing. Why should the US pay so much? European nations need to step up for their own security, especially with Russia next door.
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Rohit P
The real issue is the Strait of Hormuz. 20% of world's oil! This conflict directly impacts petrol prices in India. We need diplomatic solutions, not more American military adventures. Our foreign policy should focus on securing our energy routes independently.
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Sarah B
As someone living in Delhi, I'm more worried about the knock-on effects. A weaker NATO and a distracted US means China gets bolder in our region. We need stable global partners, not this chaos.
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Vikram M
Trump started a war without consulting allies and now expects them to clean up the mess? France is right to stay out. This is not NATO's fight. His focus should be on de-escalation, not insults.
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Karthik V
The 5% GDP demand for defence is huge. Most European nations are struggling economically. While I understand the need for security, this ultimatum approach is counterproductive. Diplomacy requires patience, not threats.

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