EU Revives Collective Defence Clause Amid
Doubts Over NATO Commitment
European Union nations
have a little-known obligation to protect one another. Experts caution it is no
replacement for NATO.
·
Growing doubts about Donald Trump’s commitment to NATO are pushing European
nations to reconsider independent defense options.
·
Focus is shifting to Article 42.7 of the European Union’s Treaty of
Lisbon, which obliges members to aid one another if attacked.
·
The clause has been used only once—by France after the 2015 Paris terrorist
attacks.
·
EU leaders are now planning exercises and a response blueprint to
test how this mutual defense would work in practice.
·
Experts warn the EU system is too complex and fragmented (different
laws, command structures, languages) to replace NATO effectively.
·
Unlike NATO’s Article 5, which focuses solely on defense,
the EU lacks unified military leadership and funding mechanisms.
·
Some leaders and analysts doubt the EU can mount a coordinated military
response without major treaty changes.
·
Alternative ideas include a “coalition of the willing” led by countries
like France and United Kingdom for missions such as Ukraine or securing key waterways.
·
Non-NATO EU members (e.g., Ireland, Austria) see Article 42.7 as increasingly
important.
·
Some countries fear emphasizing EU defense could
weaken NATO further by giving the U.S. justification to step back.
Bottom line: Europe is cautiously exploring its own
mutual defense framework, but it remains fragmented and
unlikely to replace NATO in the near future.
[ABS News Service/24.04.2026]
Europeans have increasing doubts that President Trump remains committed
to the NATO alliance and the mutual defense it ensures.
And so they are talking more seriously about their own
little-known guarantee for collective defense, an article
buried in the European Union’s governing documents.
Long dismissed by many as unworkable and even unnecessary given the
well-established NATO alliance, Article
42.7 of the E.U.’s Treaty of Lisbon obliges member states to provide military, humanitarian and financial
aid to other members in case of attack. Meant to complement NATO, it has been used
only once, when France invoked it after the November 2015 terrorist attacks in and
around Paris.
But with Mr. Trump intermittently threatening to leave NATO over
member countries’ refusal to support the war in Iran, this moment is profoundly
reshaping both the alliance and the European Union, said Camille Grand, a former
NATO official who is the secretary general of ASD Europe, a trade association for
defense industries.
He said the Trump administration’s evolving position “creates the
need to defend Europe with less America.”
E.U. leaders in Cyprus, where they have been holding informal discussions
this week, discussed the treaty provision on Thursday night. They plan to conduct
an exercise next month, as senior diplomats who deal with security matters think
through how Article 42.7 might work in practice.
“We agreed last night that the commission will prepare a blueprint
on how we will respond, in case a member state triggers” the provision, President
Nikos Christodoulides of Cyprus told reporters on Friday morning, referring to the
European Commission.
“Let’s say France triggers,” he said. “Which countries are going
to be the first to respond to the request of the French government?”
Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s foreign minister and former defense minister, is skeptical that
it would work very well.
“You cannot do serious European defense
without treaty change, and right now that is unachievable,” he said. He points out
that the European Union cannot finance military operations out of its budget, and
that member states are reluctant to commit their own troops and money to an operation
they cannot directly control.
Each nation has its own legal requirements, caveats and strictures
for rules of engagement, he said, and there are language problems and built-in confusion
over who exactly would command any pan-European operation.
“I despair as to what has to happen for us to get serious” about
defense, Mr. Sikorski said.
NATO’s famed Article
5, which commits member states to collective defense, in fact only requires them to consult about how to
respond to an attack. It has also only been used once, when it was invoked to help
defend the United States after 9/11.
On paper, the E.U.
provision appears stronger, because it requires
commitment to aid a member state under attack.
But NATO is a single-issue organization, just about defense, with a streamlined decision-making process, a clear
hierarchical structure and one dominant power — the United States — that calls the
shots. The European Union, by contrast, is a far more complex and inefficient “compromise
machine,” said Jan Techau, a former German defense official
who analyzes European security for the Eurasia Group,
a consultancy.
When people talk about European security, some see the E.U. provision
as “the way to go,” Mr. Techau said. “But I don’t think there’s much of a future
in it, because no one really wants to administer European security through E.U.
structures, which are too complicated.”
The tabletop test of 42.7 is intended to game out how it might function
politically in an emergency, with a working paper to follow.
Before Mr. Trump, no one took the E.U. provision seriously, said
Bruno Maçães, a former secretary of state for Europe from Portugal. But since NATO’s
Article 5 “is less relevant,” he said, “42.7 is more relevant.”
Europeans are also trying to build on the idea of a “coalition of
the willing,” which has discussed deploying European troops to Ukraine to monitor
any peace settlement. Led by Britain and France, the same model has been used to
discuss a European contribution to keeping the Strait of Hormuz open once hostilities
end.
With Britain no longer a member of the European Union, some analysts
see this nascent coalition as the foundation for a stronger European pillar within
NATO that is also able to act outside it.
For non-NATO states like Ireland, Austria and Malta, the E.U. provision
has added importance. But some E.U. states, especially from Central Europe and the
Baltics, worry that too loud a discussion of E.U. collective defense would give Mr. Trump the excuse to further reduce his
commitment to NATO.
Recent events have increased the urgency of the E.U.’s defense clause. First was Mr. Trump’s threat to seize Greenland,
and then an Iranian drone strike on a British base in Cyprus, a member of the European
Union, early in the Iran war. Italy, Germany and other member states sent help,
even though the defense provision had not been officially
invoked.
That’s why European officials have decided that it would be useful
to clearly lay out how the measure works.
Yet the European Union’s push into defense
has caused tension with member states and existing institutions, like NATO, and
Mr. Grand, the former NATO official, sees the potential for more discord.
“Realignment can generate frictions,” he noted, while adding that
if the players work together, European deterrence will be more effective and credible.