NATO’s public response was swift and unequivocal: there is no provision in the North Atlantic Treaty to suspend or expel any member.
That single sentence didn’t just kill the Pentagon’s plan — it exposed a legal black hole at the heart of the world’s most powerful military alliance that could reshape global security for decades.
The Treaty That Forgot the Exit Sign
Signed on April 4, 1949, the North Atlantic Treaty was built to deter Soviet expansion, not to manage internal dissent. Its 14 articles are remarkably short by modern standards — the entire document runs just over 1,000 words — and they reflect a post-war optimism that no member would ever need to be forced out.
Article 13 is the only clause that addresses membership status, and it is surprisingly narrow. It allows a member to voluntarily withdraw after giving one year’s notice, but only once that nation has been a member for at least 20 years. Spain joined in 1982, so technically it could trigger this clause tomorrow.
But here is the critical gap: the treaty says nothing about involuntary removal. There is no Article for expulsion. No suspension protocol. No voting mechanism. No two-thirds majority rule. Nothing.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
The Pentagon email that triggered this crisis was not a casual suggestion. It was a deliberately drafted policy option circulated among senior U.S. defense officials, explicitly naming Spain as a target for suspension and threatening to strip Britain of Falkland Islands support as leverage.
The memo’s authors knew they were venturing into uncharted territory. They even noted that suspending Spain would have “limited effect on U.S. military operations but a significant symbolic impact” — an admission that the move was designed to send a message, not solve a logistics problem.
But without a legal framework to execute that suspension, the threat becomes a paper tiger. NATO cannot enforce it. The alliance’s own spokesperson confirmed as much, effectively neutralizing the Pentagon’s most aggressive bargaining chip before it could even reach the negotiating table.
What the U.S. Could Do Instead
First, the U.S. could withdraw unilaterally. President Trump has already told Reuters he would consider it, asking rhetorically: “Wouldn’t you if you were me?”
A U.S. exit would not just gut NATO’s military capability; it would collapse the entire post-war security architecture of Europe.
Second, Washington could downgrade bilateral cooperation. The U.S. operates Naval Station Rota and Morón Air Base in Spain — facilities critical to American power projection across Africa and the Middle East.
A partial drawdown would hurt Spain’s economy and regional influence, but it would also force the Pentagon to find alternative staging grounds at a time when every European ally is tightening access restrictions.
Third, the U.S. could weaponize diplomatic support. The leaked email’s reference to the Falkland Islands was not accidental. By threatening to side with Argentina — whose Trump-aligned President Javier Milei claims sovereignty over the British territory — Washington signaled it is willing to sacrifice long-standing alliances to force compliance.
The European Calculus
Spain is not alone in its defiance. The United Kingdom, France, and Italy have all restricted military facility use or banned overflights for strikes against Iran.
Their reasoning is legally sound: granting access for offensive operations would constitute entering the war, triggering obligations and risks these governments are unwilling to accept.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has leaned heavily into this position, noting that Spain spends 2.1% of GDP on defense — above NATO’s traditional benchmark — and remains a “loyal partner” within the bounds of international law.
