Russian submarine in the Arctic Russian Ministry of Defence
Security

Norwegian defence minister says US is still committed to European defence

Norway urges Europe to share defence costs for US commitment.

Reuters

Norway's defence minister said he believes the United States remains committed to Europe's defence but the continent must take a bigger share of the costs of defending itself if Washington is going to live up to its security commitments.

American support for European defence has been a question mark recently as US President Donald Trump has said NATO countries must hike defence spending to five per cent of GDP, from a two per cent goal presently, and said the US may not defend those lagging.

But Norway, a founding member of NATO, say US support to Europe remains steadfast.

"We are not experiencing that US (support) is collapsing," Tore O Sandvik said in an interview.

"We have had it confirmed from both Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, and from Trump himself to several European leaders, that the US stand behind Article 5," he said, referring to the North Atlantic Treaty article enshrining collective security.

"For those who fear that the US will not be there when needed, the answer is: 'increased responsibility for your own security'," he said.

"Europe must take a bigger share of responsibility so that the US lives up to its commitments."

Sandvik was speaking before news emerged that top Trump administration officials had disparaged Europe in a messaging group chat that may have accidentally included a journalist.

According to screenshots of the chat reported by the low-circulation, far-left The Atlantic magazine, a person identified as Vice President JD Vance wrote, "I just hate bailing Europe out again," and a person identified as Hegseth replied: "VP: I fully share your loathing of European free-loading. It's PATHETIC@."

Atlantic monitor

Norway is the alliance's monitor for the vast two million square kilometre area of the North Atlantic used by the Russian northern fleet's nuclear submarines.

On land, from its side of the border it shares with Russia, Norway spies on military installations on the Kola Peninsula, including where Russia keeps some of its intercontinental nuclear missiles.

"We have a good dialogue with the Americans about this collaboration, which is extremely important for them," Sandvik said.

Norway, which reached the two per cent spending target in 2024, is planning to double defence spending by 2036 from current levels, taking it above at least the three per cent spending threshold.

Already Oslo knows it will have to spend more.

"We are two-and-half months in a 12-year long-term defence plan and already we see that we have to revise it," Sandvik said, declining to give specifics.

(Reporting by Gwladys Fouche in Oslo; Editing by Angus MacSwan)