Contact Us

Trump calls on NATO allies to 'get guts,' send ships to Strait of Hormuz

Asked why he had not mentioned NATO in his Wednesday night address to the nation, Trump said it was not a NATO speech but that he had referenced the strait and those who were absent. "They gotta get guts and go in and just send your ships up there and enjoy it," he told Politico.

Anadolu Agency AMERICAS
Published April 02,2026
Subscribe

US President Donald Trump on Thursday urged the members of NATO to gather the courage to send naval vessels to the Strait of Hormuz, again disparaging the longtime military alliance.

Asked why he had not mentioned NATO in his Wednesday night address to the nation, Trump said it was not a NATO speech but that he had referenced the strait and those who were absent. "They gotta get guts and go in and just send your ships up there and enjoy it," he told Politico.

Pressed on whether he was frustrated with the alliance, Trump said: "I couldn't care less. I didn't need them."

He added: "But if I ever did need them, they wouldn't be there."

NATO has invoked Article 5-its collective defense clause-just once in its history, after the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. NATO allies have criticized Trump for starting the war on Iran without consulting them.

The remarks are the latest in a string of pointed criticisms Trump has directed at NATO over its response to the Strait of Hormuz crisis. He has previously called alliance members "cowards" and, in a separate interview with British daily The Telegraph, described NATO as a "paper tiger" and said leaving the alliance was "beyond reconsideration."

Leaving NATO unilaterally—a move Trump has hinted at since his first term—would face significant legal hurdles. A 2023 law bars any US president from withdrawing from the alliance without the backing of a two-thirds majority in the US Senate.

The strait, through which roughly 20 million barrels of oil pass daily, has been effectively disrupted since early March following Iranian measures taken in retaliation for the US-Israeli offensive on Iran that began on Feb. 28.

Trump has repeatedly urged European allies and Gulf states to take a more active role in securing the strait, arguing that countries dependent on its oil should bear responsibility for reopening it.

Trump will meet with NATO chief Mark Rutte in Washington next week, according to The Wall Street Journal.