The Pentagon has issued a stark warning. Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth, in a closed-door session with NATO allies, threatened a fundamental rethink of US troop deployments across Europe. The subtext is clear: Washington is preparing to pivot towards the Indo-Pacific, and Europe, specifically Britain, must fill the void.
This is not a diplomatic tiff. It is a threat vector of the highest order. For decades, the US forward presence has been the backbone of NATO’s deterrence.
If that backbone fractures, the strategic reality becomes simple. Moscow will test the seams. The Baltic states, Poland, even the Eastern Flank will become pressure points.
And Britain, still nursing post-Brexit defence ambitions, must now confront a hard truth. Our land forces are hollowed out. The Army is at its smallest since the Napoleonic era.
Our armoured brigades lack sufficient Challenger 3 tanks. Ammunition stockpiles are dangerously low. The US has been the logistical lifeline.
Without that, we must triple our defence spending, not to 2.5% of GDP, but to 4%. And we must do it now.
The strategic pivot is overdue, but the tactical readiness is not. Expect calls for a permanent British-led rapid reaction corps. Expect pressure on Berlin and Paris to match.
But the hardware matters most. We need more Typhoons, more surface combatants, and a credible cyber shield. The US threat is a chess move.
Britain must counter it with a steel fist, not a begging bowl.









