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Monday, May 18, 2026

Military Madness > NATO breaking up! What will that look like?

 

North Atlantic separation: What might follow a NATO divorce

Canceled troop deployments and delayed weapons deliveries are signaling the end of the bloc’s old military order

Published 18 May, 2026 12:55

North Atlantic separation: What might follow a NATO divorce

The decoupling of the US and European armies within NATO is no longer theoretical – the process is already underway. American troop deployments are being canceled, and weapons deliveries – delayed.

The latest example came in early May, when the US canceled the rotation of 4,000 troops into Poland, a week after the announcement Washington is pulling 5,000 soldiers from Germany following German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s criticism of the US-Israeli war on Iran as misguided.

US War Secretary Pete Hegseth has also canceled the deployment to Germany of a battalion specializing in long-range missiles, according to a leaked memo.

The bigger picture: America in Europe 

US forces have been permanently stationed on the European continent since World War II. Up to 80,000 American troops were stationed there in 2025 under a “coupled” system that is now unravelling. 

Both US President Donald Trump and his predecessor Joe Biden have signaled that Washington’s commitment to European defense is on the wane.

Washington’s National Security Strategy currently describes the EU as a “globalist entity” designed to “screw” the US while free-riding on military protection. In a profound break with decades of political orthodoxy, Trump has publicly berated European leaders over military spending, questioned the value of NATO, and openly speculated about US troop withdrawals from Germany, Spain and Italy.

Responses by NATO’s European members have ranged from outright rejection of US militarism, as in the case of Spain, to both verbal criticism and acquiescence.

What decoupling actually means 

Decoupling armies in practical terms means the withdrawal of most of the 80,000 US troops in Europe, ending the post-1945 tradition of combined territorial defense and deterrence.

NATO’s European capitals are thus waking up to the prospect of living without the US military umbrella. “For the first time in human memory, we are alone,” as ex-ECB chief Mario Draghi has put it.

The limits of US power 

The US-Israeli war on Iran has stretched American stocks of ammunition, artillery systems, and missile interceptors thinner than at any point since the end of the Cold War.

US officials have warned several NATO members – including Baltic and Scandinavian states – that crucial weapons deliveries through the Foreign Military Sales program will be delayed, citing the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Beyond Iran, China remains the Pentagon’s primary long-term concern. Every brigade kept in Europe is one less available for a potential Pacific conflict.

Europe has become a secondary theater where NATO’s Euro-bloc will be expected to fend for itself.

‘Big bang’ or non-starter – EU’s army plan 

Earlier this year, EU defense chief Andrius Kubilius called for a “big bang in defense” – a 100,000-strong standing army to operate independently of the US and NATO.

The idea is deeply controversial. It would violate the EU treaty, require a new intergovernmental accord, and force member states to cede sovereignty over their armed forces – a non-starter for many capitals.

France has long championed the plan, with President Emmanuel Macron arguing for “strategic autonomy” from Washington, though Paris insists its nuclear deterrent would stay outside any joint command.

In practice, such a force would be a tightly integrated EU military structure built around shared command, joint procurement, and rapid-reaction units, rather than a single army replacing national militaries. Operational control would likely fall to an expanded EU military headquarters in Brussels.

But analysts say the idea faces insurmountable legal hurdles: the EU’s founding treaties explicitly rule out a common army, and defense policy remains the exclusive preserve of national governments.

Europe’s capability problem 

Europe’s armies however remain highly dependent on the US for spy satellites, long-range missiles, heavy airlift aircraft, and undersea warfare capacity.

Earlier this month, German defense experts and industry executives published a paper arguing that EU defense autonomy will cost around $59 billion per year for the next decade.

The dramatic rise in NATO’s European members military spending has not translated into greater operational autonomy, though that may come. Vast amounts have been and will be spent, but capabilities remain fragmented across the bloc.

The internal European scramble 

Across the continent NATO’s European members are arming themselves at a pace not seen since the Cold War, citing intelligence reports of a ‘Russian threat’ – despite Moscow’s outright rejection of such – in an apparent effort to consolidate the EU and to reboot their economies through militarization.

In total, European NATO members spent a combined $559 billion on defense in 2025, with Germany’s outlays rising 24% to $114 billion and Spain’s jumping 50% to $40.2 billion.

The Franco-German brotherhood is the obvious place to find dissonance. In March, French President Emmanuel Macron announced plans to expand his country’s nuclear stockpile to ensure a secrecy-obscured arsenal so that “no state, however powerful, could shield itself from it, and no state, however vast, would recover from it.”

Germany’s Merz has unlocked the country’s historical debt brake and spent billions on military capacity while private demand in his country collapses and his electorate lurches to the far right. In a speech just days after the 80th anniversary of the fall of the Third Reich last May, Merz vowed to turn the Bundeswehr into the “strongest conventional army in Europe.”

Berlin remains deeply uncomfortable with Macron’s nuclear overtures, while German officials have started recalling their country’s past military forays in ways that are making neighboring countries nervous.

The view from Moscow 

For Russia, the militarization of European states and transformation of the EU into a military alliance resembling NATO, but without US defense and deterrence, presents a direct and growing threat. European elites have a historical tradition of ‘marching eastward’.

Russia has scorned the EU army idea, suggesting that the bloc should first tackle its internal problems – refugees, energy dependence, and lagging NATO contributions.

Moscow has also repeatedly condemned the EU’s militarization as “using ostentatious Russophobia” as a pretext to turn Russia into a “model external enemy” and divert attention from internal European crises.

For Moscow, any transformation of the EU into a military alliance would raise security concerns and upset an already fragile strategic balance in Europe.


The madness, of course, is that Europe is preparing for an invasion by Russia that will never happen. They are completely oblivious to the real enemy within. Within is few very short years, long before Moscow has recovered from it Ukrainian headache, civil war will break out across the continent as Europeans finally wake up to the threat from Islam. 


The weapons developed for a war against Russia will be of little use in urban street fighting and Europe will have to develop more new weapons systems at great costs.

There is nothing good in the near future for Europe!






This Week's Islamic Massacres > Three massacres in southern Turkey; Three dead in San Diego mosque; 9 injured in Italy in vehicular jihad


We don't know if the perpetrators were Muslim, but most likely the victims were Muslim, as most Turks are. 



Türkiye: Six dead and eight wounded in an armed attack near Mersin; suspect still at large

Images broadcast by local media show ambulances transferring injured people to a major nearby hospital. [Yasin AKGUL / AFP]

Near the city of Mersin in southern Turkey, an armed attack on Monday, May 18, left six dead and eight wounded. The suspected perpetrator, a 37-year-old man, is still being actively sought by authorities.

A daytime shooting. After a gunman opened fire near the city of Mersin in southern Turkey, six people were killed and eight others wounded on Monday, May 18, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced .

"I pray to God to grant his mercy to our six fellow citizens who lost their lives (...) and I wish a speedy recovery to our eight injured who are still hospitalized," the Turkish head of state also said in a televised statement, without giving further information on the sequence of events.

According to the private news agencies DHA and IHA, the perpetrator first opened fire in a restaurant, killing the owner and an employee and wounding several customers, before shooting two other men during his escape.

"He came in without saying a word (...) We thought he was going to take out his phone, but he took out a gun. I ducked down, he shot me," Mehmet Han Topal, a restaurant employee injured in the hip, told the IHA news agency.

The shooter is still on the run

Among the victims was a shepherd who was grazing his flock near the restaurant where the suspect opened fire, located along a road about 40 km northeast of Mersin. Local authorities in the province are currently declining to comment. 

Still at large, the suspected gunman is a 37-year-old man, according to the official Anadolu news agency and the Sabah newspaper, which claim he previously shot and killed his ex-wife. Images broadcast by local media show a helicopter circling the area in search of the suspect, as well as ambulances transporting the wounded to a nearby hospital. 

This latest incident comes amid a broader pattern of armed violence in the country in recent months. Last April, a 14-year-old opened fire at a school about 180 kilometers to the east, killing nine students aged 10 and 11, as well as a teacher.

A 19-year-old gunman had injured 16 people a day earlier at a high school in the southeast of the country. In the wake of these events, President Erdogan announced his intention to tighten regulations in order to "limit the possession of firearms."




Too early to know much about these perps, but again, the victims are certainly Muslims.


United States: At least three dead in a San Diego mosque; the two suspected shooters found dead nearby

[REUTERS/Mike Blake]

At least three people died in a mosque in San Diego, California, on Monday. The two suspected gunmen were found dead nearby, according to the FBI. 

Three people died in a San Diego mosque in California after two suspected gunmen entered the building and were found dead not far from the place of worship, US authorities announced Monday.

"At this point, it appears that the suspects died from self-inflicted gunshot wounds," San Diego Police Chief Scott Wahl said at a news conference.




No deaths here, but 9 serious injuries including 2 women who lost their legs.


Italy: Muslim migrant vehicular jihadi says ‘I’m bullied, marginalized, and I live in a racist country’


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Salim El Koudri has clearly learned how to sound the right notes in the West in order to gain the sympathy of the political and media elites. His complaint about Italy being racist will win him many defenders, and has the additional benefit of diverting attention from the fact that he is a jihadi, employing a murder technique that many jihadis have used before him. His claim of racism will also likely stymie efforts to limit mass Muslim migration in the wake of his attack: a jihadi to the last, El Koudri is trying to shame Italians into hesitating to draw the obvious conclusions from his act, and taking the obviously necessary steps to protect themselves.

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Italy: Suspect Salim El Koudri justified Modena car-ramming attack by telling investigators he was ‘bullied’ and ‘lived in a racist country’

by Thomas Brooke, Remix News, May 18, 2026:

The second-generation Moroccan migrant accused of ploughing into pedestrians in the Italian city of Modena on Saturday reportedly sought to justify his actions by telling investigators he had been bullied, marginalized, and was living in a racist country.

Salim El Koudri, 31, was arrested after allegedly driving a Citroen C3 through the city center, hitting seven people and leaving two victims with such catastrophic injuries that they required amputations of their lower limbs. One of the victims remains in a life-threatening condition.

According to Il Giornale, El Koudri told investigators, “I’m bullied, marginalized, and I live in a racist country.”

El Koudri was born in Seriate, near Bergamo, to Moroccan parents and lived alone in Ravarino, in the province of Modena. He is unemployed, has a degree in economics, and has no criminal record. He had previously received psychiatric treatment in 2022 for schizoid personality disorder.

Witnesses said the car deliberately targeted pedestrians, as seen in footage posted by Remix News, which X has prevented from being embedded.

One account cited by the Italian newspaper said it looked as though the vehicle was trying to “mow down as many people as possible.”

The suspect reportedly exited the vehicle and attempted to stab witnesses who chased after him as he sought to flee.

The attack has drawn comparisons to previous vehicle-ramming attacks in Nice, Berlin, and Barcelona, though the motive in Modena has not been confirmed as religious or ideological. Il Giornale suggested investigators are focusing instead on possible personal resentment, isolation, and hatred toward the society in which El Koudri lived….

Anti-terror police continue to be involved in the investigation while a motive is confirmed.