Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Acting on a whim, can an infuriated Donald Trump pull out from NATO like he says?

Acting on a whim, can an infuriated Donald Trump pull out from NATO like he says?

Posted on 2 April 2026 By jobuzo

Throwing caution to the winds comes quite easy to President Donald Trump, which is evident in his boastful words and in his whimsical acts of arbitrariness. More so because his Iran operation may not be working to his plan. But in threatening to pull out from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) on April 1, the mercurial and temperamental POTUS may have bitten off more than he can chew.

Here, the law may not permit him to do so. With many US Presidents of the past having withdrawn from international treaties, in 2023, President Joe Biden had enacted an act that specifically laid down that the POTUS cannot withdraw from NATO without Congressional approval.

The National Defense Authorization Act 2024 also mandated the US Senate’s approval with two-thirds majority if Trump wants to pull out from NATO. And going by the numbers in the Senate and Trump’s decline in popularity, it would be an extremely uphill task. The other option is an act passed by the Congress which would need cross-voting. For all practical purposes, at best, the issue could land up in the courts.

For much of his second presidential tenure, Trump has berated the NATO alliance as “freeloaders” and recently as “paper tigers”. Infuriated over the lack of support among the European NATO member countries for the joint US-Israel military action in Iran, he has now threatened to pull out from the alliance that had safeguarded western interests in Europe and elsewhere.

What Trump wanted was a blanket support to the US-Israel operation in Iran as well as in warding off Iranian sway over the Hormuz Strait. One indication of the chasm that had set in between the US and other NATO members came to fore during Trump’s ardent desire to annex Greenland and make it part of America. Trump’s Greenland plan had alarmed the non-US NATO members.

The European NATO members also contend that they did not see a role in Iran because they were not consulted before the US action nor was the US attacked.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

In the not very far past, these member countries had played handmaiden to the US when they offered complete support in cash, kind, ‘boots in the ground’ for the US war in Afghanistan.

Set up in 1949 in the aftermath of the Second World War, NATO has been the single most important bulwark to safeguard western interests from Communist Soviet Russia’s influence.

Logistically, a US pull-out from NATO would be a massive effort because of the numerous US military architecture spread across Europe. European security was largely American which also provided the safety of an American nuclear umbrella.

A corrosion in NATO’s credibility would lead to much greater influence of Russia and China with European powers like the UK, France and Germany ramping up their military capabilities.

Acting on a whim, can an infuriated Donald Trump pull out from NATO like he says?


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Nepal charges 32 over fake helicopter rescues in US$19.7m trekking insurance scam
Next Post: Explainer: What did Trump say in his national address on the Iran conflict?

Related Posts

Netflix backs out of bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, giving studios, HBO, and CNN to Ellison-owned Paramount Netflix backs out of bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, giving studios, HBO, and CNN to Ellison-owned Paramount News
Israel keeps up Iran attacks with debate raging on when to stop Israel keeps up Iran attacks with debate raging on when to stop News
Trump shifts rhetoric, backs Ukraine to retake lost land amid Russian economic woes Trump shifts rhetoric, backs Ukraine to retake lost land amid Russian economic woes News

Latest

  • Wang Yi highlights Austria’s role in China-Europe links
  • China keeps an eye on AI smart glasses as privacy concerns come into focus
  • Rescue race intensifies after Venezuela’s deadliest quakes in decades
  • Bafana Bafana stun South Korea to reach World Cup knockouts
  • Chinese, Austrian foreign ministers hold talks in Beijing
  • New wave of potent synthetic drugs drives rise in global drug use, says UN
  • JD Vance jokes about wife’s $8.75 maternity dress amid NYT row
  • Is Andy Burnham the man to fight the right?
  • Daily roundup: LTA to hike fee for Malaysian cross-border taxis from $2 a month to $15 per trip — and other top stories today
  • DeepSeek on hiring spree – seeks newcomers, not just AI geniuses

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs