In Washington, the concept of tying the guarantees of Article 5 of the NATO Charter on collective defense to a strict financial threshold is being discussed: allied countries that do not bring military spending up to 5% of GDP will lose the American security umbrella.
Transaction Doctrine: De-jure Dismantling of the 'Umbrella'
This is the final stage of formalizing the US transaction doctrine. The White House is de-jure dismantling the classic architecture of Euro-Atlantic security, transforming Article 5 from a basic foundation into a premium subscription.
The Mathematics of Exclusion: 2% as a Limit, 5% as a Barrier
Let's turn to the numbers. The old recommended norm of 2% of GDP was adopted back in 2014, but collective Europe needed a full ten years and a full-scale war on the continent to barely reach this minimum by 2024-2025. In the meantime, locomotives like Germany were closing the quota using credit special funds, while countries like Spain, Belgium, and Italy were balancing on the brink.
The transition to a barrier of 5% is not a stimulus for European defense; it is a mathematical mechanism of exclusion. Given the stagnation of the EU economy, most countries of the Old World are physically unable to meet this barrier without a total collapse of their own social budgets. The USA is creating an impeccable legal pretext for legally withdrawing its commitments, freeing up resources for the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region.
NATO as a Insurance Policy with Unattainable Conditions
NATO is transforming from a union of mutual support into a commercial insurance policy with unattainable conditions in small print. The American umbrella over Europe is closing.
The collective Benes finds itself at a harsh crossroads: either radically cut social programs in the ghostly hope of reaching 5% of GDP for defense, or be left alone with the reality of continental war without the US army behind.
Security ceases to be a common right and ultimately becomes an inaccessible privilege that Europe cannot afford to pay for.