In a classic display of his unilateralist instincts, President Donald Trump has issued a stark ultimatum to the deeply multilateral NATO alliance: adopt his bilateral-style demands or risk U.S. disengagement from the economic fight against Russia.
The President’s message on Truth Social was not one of a partner seeking consensus, but of a powerful actor dictating terms. He laid down firm, non-negotiable conditions—a full oil ban and a collective confrontation with China—as the price for his cooperation on sanctions.
This approach is fundamentally at odds with the spirit of NATO, which operates on the principle of consultation and collective decision-making. Trump’s “my way or the highway” stance challenges the very fabric of the alliance, treating it as a collection of subordinate states rather than a partnership of equals.
The ultimatum forces the multilateral alliance to respond to a unilateral demand. They must decide whether to acquiesce to the terms set by their most powerful member or to assert their own collective process, risking a major transatlantic rift in the midst of a major European war.
