Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Friday said Spain was a “reliable member” of NATO, after a report saying that the US was considering trying to suspend it over its refusal to support military operations against Iran.
Reuters cited an anonymous US official as telling it that the Pentagon had outlined the suspension option in an e-mail looking at ways to punish NATO allies that steered clear of the US-Israeli war against Iran.
The same e-mail also suggested the US could review its position on the Falkland Islands in retaliation for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s lack of support in the war.
Photo: EPA
“Spain is a reliable member within NATO” which is fulfilling all its obligations, Sanchez told reporters in English during a visit to Cyprus for an EU summit.
“As a result, I am absolutely not worried,” he said.
The Socialist leader added in Spanish: “We don’t work on the basis of e-mails, we work off official documents, and the position that the United States government has set out in this case.”
There is no provision in the NATO treaty allowing for the suspension or expulsion of a member of the world’s most powerful military alliance.
Responding to a question about the Reuters report, Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson said the US Department of Defense “will ensure that the president has credible options to ensure that our allies are no longer a paper tiger and instead do their part,” but did not provide further details.
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly railed against NATO allies for refusing to join the war that engulfed the Middle East, saying he viewed it as a betrayal.
Some of them — France, Spain and Italy — did not allow US military aircraft deployed for the war to overfly their territories or to use bases.
A US Department of State spokesperson on Friday told Agence France-Presse that Washington remained neutral on the issue of contested sovereignty of the Falkland Islands, the South Atlantic archipelago disputed between Argentina and the UK.
“Our position on The Islands remains one of neutrality. We acknowledge that there are conflicting claims of sovereignty between Argentina and the UK,” the spokesperson said, adding that the US recognizes “de facto United Kingdom administration” of the islands without taking sides on sovereignty claims.
Trump had also tried, in vain, to get European NATO members to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz, the key waterway for Gulf energy exports, which Iran has effectively closed with military threats and attacks.
Washington’s expectation that NATO members’ facilities and territories should be available to the US without question has added to strains within the alliance.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni told reporters in Cyprus that “NATO must remain united. I believe it is a source of strength.”
Sanchez said his government’s stance was “absolute cooperation with allies, but always within the bounds of international law.”
Sanchez has repeatedly found himself in Trump’s crosshairs since the Republican president returned to office in January last year.
Last year, he refused to agree to ramp up NATO defense spending to 5 percent of GDP as demanded by Trump, who then suggested expelling Spain from the alliance.
Sanchez condemned the US military intervention in Venezuela on Jan. 3 that abducted the South American country’s strongman socialist president Nicolas Maduro and is a virulent critic of Washington’s ally Israel.
NATO is to hold its next summit in Turkey on July 7 and 8.
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