- Trump arrives in Turkey on Tuesday for a bilateral with President Erdogan before Wednesday’s full NATO summit — his first major encounter with the alliance since ties have deteriorated sharply following the February 28 US-Israel strikes on Iran, which NATO allies were not consulted on and which triggered a global energy crisis through Strait of Hormuz disruption; several allies denied the US use of their military bases for early Iran strikes, drawing Trump’s public anger.
- Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy on Wednesday to discuss ending Russia’s war, which Trump pledged as a candidate to resolve within a day of returning to office; instead the White House has been “preoccupied for months” with the Iran conflict, leaving US-brokered Kyiv-Moscow talks stalled; Trump spoke to Putin on Saturday ahead of the summit — the Kremlin says Putin remains willing to talk but has rejected proposals to halt long-range strikes and is pushing maximalist territorial demands for land Russia hasn’t captured by force.
- The US is demanding NATO allies not merely set a path toward 5% of GDP in defense spending but “get to 5 percent as soon as possible,” according to US Ambassador to NATO Matt Whitaker — a significant escalation from the prior 2% target and the 3.5% goal discussed at recent summits; the US has simultaneously announced plans to withdraw 5,000 troops from Europe and slash the military assets it would provide in a crisis, sending contradictory signals about its commitment to European defense.
- Trump’s Greenland ambitions remain live and unresolved: the US official on the conference call said Trump still wants to acquire the territory (part of NATO ally Denmark) but is “exploring other options” in the face of European opposition — an open wound heading into a summit where European solidarity is already strained by the Iran war fallout, the burden-sharing fight, and what some European leaders see as NATO Secretary General Rutte’s excessively deferential approach to Trump.
What Happened?
President Trump is traveling to Turkey for a NATO summit charged with tension on multiple fronts simultaneously. The Ukraine war, which Trump promised to end quickly, remains in a stalemate with US-brokered peace talks stalled while the administration was consumed by the Iran conflict. European allies are frustrated by being excluded from the Iran war decision, furious over energy market disruption from Hormuz closure, and skeptical of US security commitments after Washington announced troop withdrawals from Europe. Trump has demanded allies reach 5% of GDP in defense spending — a target only a handful of members are anywhere close to — while simultaneously reducing US military presence on the continent. His meeting with Zelenskyy on Wednesday will be closely watched for any signal of whether Washington is ready to re-engage on Ukraine diplomacy or whether Kyiv is effectively on its own.
Why It Matters?
The NATO summit is the most consequential multilateral diplomatic event since the Iran war began, and its outcome will shape European security architecture for years. Three dynamics are converging: the Ukraine war stalemate (now in its fifth year with neither side making progress), the post-Iran fallout within the alliance (US allies not consulted on a decision that triggered a global energy crisis), and an unprecedented US demand for defense spending at levels that would require most European economies to make painful fiscal trade-offs. The combination has produced the most strained US-NATO relationship since the alliance’s founding, with even the traditionally Atlanticist core of the alliance — Germany, France, UK — taking a harder line on burden-sharing reciprocity than at any prior summit. The summit’s communiqué, and whether Trump endorses it or undercuts it in his press conference, will be the signal markets and foreign ministries watch most closely.
What’s Next?
The Trump-Zelenskyy meeting Wednesday is the highest-profile bilateral, with any joint statement on Ukraine peace talks the most market-sensitive outcome. If Trump and Zelenskyy present a unified framework for renewed negotiations with Russia, it would be a significant positive signal for European security and energy markets still recovering from Hormuz disruption. If the meeting produces tension or silence on Ukraine — as has happened before — it would signal continued strategic drift that leaves Kyiv increasingly dependent on European support alone. On defense spending, watch whether Trump declares the summit a success on the 5% commitment or publicly humiliates allies who don’t meet his standard — the former would soothe transatlantic tensions, the latter could accelerate European defense autonomy efforts that exclude US companies from key procurement decisions.
Source: Bloomberg












