NATO can’t afford freeloading—Sánchez’s bad politics keep Spain below its duty; allies must hold his feet to the fire and force action before hesitation becomes a dangerous liability.
I’ll say it bluntly—Pedro Sánchez, the Prime Minister of
Spain, is weakening NATO, dodging defense commitments while pretending moral
superiority. His country enjoys the alliance’s protection but resists
responsibility, undermining unity when threats rise. It is time for the U.S.
and its allies to hold Spain’s feet to the fire to meet the 2% defense spending
benchmark immediately, align its foreign policy with collective security
priorities, and prove—through action, not rhetoric—that it stands shoulder to shoulder
when it actually matters.
I don’t deal in polite illusions. NATO is not a book club
where everyone shows up with opinions and leaves with applause. It is a war
pact, forged in steel and fear, built to deter enemies who don’t care about
speeches. Since 2014, the deal has been simple: spend at least 2% of GDP on
defense. Not later. Not when convenient. Now. And yet Spain, under Sánchez, has
hovered around 1.2%–1.3% in recent years. That gap is not just a statistic. It
is a signal—a signal that when the bill comes due, someone else will pick it
up.
I look at that number and I see a quiet gamble. Spain
bets that the United States will always be there. And so far, that bet has paid
off. The U.S. defense budget has pushed past $800 billion, carrying the
alliance like a heavyweight dragging a team of lightweights. That is not
partnership. That is dependence disguised as diplomacy. A man who rents a
shield should not mock the man who forged it. But that is exactly the
posture I see—confidence without contribution.
Then I hear the moral tone. Sánchez speaks like a
referee, like Spain holds the ethical high ground in every dispute. But I don’t
buy it. Because moral authority without muscle is just noise. NATO is not
defended by good intentions. It is defended by readiness, equipment, and the
willingness to act when things get ugly. And right now, Spain is talking like a
leader while spending like a spectator.
Let me get specific, because this is where the fog
clears. When the U.S. and Israel moved against Iran, Pedro Sánchez forbade U.S.
forces from using bases in Spain to refuel aircraft or prepare operations tied
to that campaign. He publicly declared, “We are not going to be complicit,”
branding the action illegal and pushing a “No to the war” stance. This happened
while tensions around the Strait of Hormuz threatened global oil flow. So in a
live crisis, Spain didn’t just stay neutral—it denied logistical support,
rejected alignment, and openly opposed the operation, even as other allies
focused on deterrence and readiness.
How about the Israel-Gaza crisis. In 2024, Spain,
alongside Ireland and Norway, formally recognized Palestinian statehood. That
move detonated political tension with Israel and exposed a fault line inside
NATO. Again, I am not debating the morality of the decision—I am pointing to
the timing and the impact. When allies were trying to maintain a unified front,
Spain chose divergence. It stepped out of line, not quietly, but loudly, and
forced the alliance to absorb the shock.
And while all this was unfolding, while Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine reshaped European security overnight, other NATO countries moved
fast. Poland surged past 3% of GDP on defense, aiming toward 4%. The Baltic
states tightened their belts and expanded their forces. Germany broke decades
of hesitation and committed €100 billion to military modernization. That is
what urgency looks like. That is what fear turning into action looks like.
Spain? Still behind the line.
This is where Donald Trump forced the uncomfortable
conversation. He did not create the imbalance—he exposed it. For years,
American leaders whispered about burden-sharing. Trump said it out loud: pay
your share. And suddenly, the room got tense. Not because he was wrong, but
because he was blunt. When he told Europe, “This is your backyard,” he was not
abandoning them. He was demanding adulthood. Some countries listened. Spain,
under Sánchez, hesitated.
I don’t ignore the counterargument. Spain hosts strategic
bases, contributes to NATO missions, participates in joint operations. That is
true. But let’s stop pretending those contributions cancel out the core issue.
NATO’s strength is measured in capability, not convenience. You cannot offset
chronic underfunding with occasional participation and expect the math to work
out. It doesn’t.
And here is the dangerous part. NATO runs on trust as
much as treaties. Article 5—the promise that an attack on one is an attack on
all—is sacred. But even sacred promises depend on belief. If members start to
question whether others are pulling their weight, that belief weakens. Not
overnight, not dramatically, but slowly, like rust eating through steel. A
rope does not snap in one pull; it frays until it cannot hold.
I ask a simple question, and I want a real answer: if a
crisis erupts tomorrow—something bigger than Ukraine, something that demands
full mobilization—where does Spain stand? Does it show up fully equipped, fully
committed, ready to act? Or does it arrive late, underfunded, and still
speaking the language of caution?
Because the pattern I see is not random. It is
consistent. Lower spending. Slower response. Divergent political moves at
critical moments. That is not leadership. That is selective engagement.
So what happens now? We keep pretending? We keep
applauding speeches while ignoring numbers? I don’t think we can afford that
anymore. The world is not getting safer. It is getting sharper, faster, more
unpredictable. Drones, cyberattacks, proxy wars—this is not the Cold War
playbook. This is something messier, something that punishes hesitation.
That is why I say the U.S. and its allies must act—not
with empty warnings, but with clear expectations. Meet the 2% benchmark on a
fixed timeline. Increase operational contributions in active security zones.
Align major foreign policy moves with alliance strategy instead of blindsiding
partners. And if those conditions are not met, then Spain should face reduced
influence within NATO’s decision-making structure. Not exile—but consequence.
Because without consequence, commitment becomes optional.
And once commitment is optional, the alliance starts to hollow out from the
inside.
I am not calling for division. I am calling for
discipline. Spain is not an enemy. But right now, under Sánchez, it is not
acting like a fully reliable ally either. And pretending otherwise does not
strengthen NATO—it weakens it.
So I will say it again, with no sugarcoating. Spain is
standing under NATO’s umbrella while refusing to help hold it up. That is not
solidarity. That is convenience. And in a world where storms are gathering
fast, convenience is a luxury the NATO alliance can no longer afford.
Separate from today’s
article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for
readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on
Google Play: Brief Book Series.






