Another NATO ally signs onto European nuclear umbrella as continent boosts self-defense

Norway has joined France’s nuclear deterrence initiative, becoming the ninth European country to participate in discussions over how France’s nuclear arsenal could contribute to European security. Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre stressed that deterrence will continue to be provided by NATO and said France consulted both NATO and the United States as the initiative expanded. The effort also includes Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Greece and the United Kingdom. President Emmanuel Macron has positioned France at the center of a more self-reliant European security framework as allies increase defense spending and military cooperation, following years of pressure from President Donald Trump for Europe to shoulder more of NATO’s burden. France retains sole authority over any decision involving its nuclear arsenal and has not announced plans to permanently station nuclear weapons in participating nations. Participating countries will instead take part in discussions, planning and exercises, and Macron has said they could temporarily host French strategic air forces. The arrangement leaves open questions about exactly what commitments France is making, as it seeks to strengthen deterrence by making Russia consider that threats against European allies could implicate French security interests without offering a formal nuclear guarantee.

What’s reported

Norway announced it will join France’s “forward deterrence” initiative, becoming the ninth participating country.
The other eight countries are Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Greece and the United Kingdom.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said deterrence will continue to be provided by NATO and that France consulted NATO and the U.S.
The expansion follows President Trump’s warnings that the U.S. should not carry a disproportionate share of Europe’s defense burden.
Trump said in 2025: “If they don’t pay, I’m not going to defend them.”
At NATO’s 2026 summit in The Hague, allies agreed to a new goal of spending 5% of GDP on defense by 2035.
France retains sole authority over its nuclear arsenal and will not permanently station nuclear weapons in participating nations.
Participating nations will take part in discussions, planning and exercises; they could temporarily host French strategic air forces.
The initiative leaves open questions about exact commitments France is making, as it does not offer a formal nuclear guarantee.

Open questions

The article notes that the arrangement leaves open questions about exactly what commitments France is making through the initiative.

Key figures

President Emmanuel Macron (France)
Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre
President Donald Trump (United States)
President Charles de Gaulle (historical, France)

Sources: foxnews.com

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