Could Trump follow through on his threats to quit NATO? Experts say it’s possible
OTTAWA — President Donald Trump’s comments to a British newspaper this week revived speculation about whether he is ready to pull the U.S. out of the NATO defensive pact, of which Canada is a member.
Venting his frustration over what he claimed is the failure of allies to help America in its war against Iran, Trump told the Daily Telegraph NATO is a “paper tiger” and that the U.S. leaving the alliance is now “beyond reconsideration.”
Aaron Ettinger, associate professor of political science at Carleton University, said the threat of the U.S. quitting NATO has grave implications for Western security and must be taken seriously.
“We can’t just treat Trump’s threats as a TACO Tuesday situation,” Ettinger said, referring to the acronym “Trump Always Chickens Out,” which describes the president’s pattern of issuing aggressive threats before caving or doing nothing.
