NATO Summit: Europe must 'project decency, credibility' to 'earn respect, attract partners'
โWe have to project decency and credibility,โ Former French Ambassador to #NATO Muriel Domenach tells #F24Debate, arguing both are key to maintaining US engagement, deterring adversaries, and attracti
โWe have to project decency and credibility,โ Former French Ambassador to #NATO Muriel Domenach tells #F24Debate, arguing both are key to maintaining
Read Full Story at France 24 โWhy This Matters
Europeโs ability to project decency and credibility will determine whether NATO remains a cohesive alliance or fractures under competing pressures. In an era where U.S. leadership is increasingly transactional, Europeโs moral and strategic consistency could be the decisive factor in preserving transatlantic security guaranteesโand in deterring adversaries from exploiting divisions within the bloc.
Background Context
The strained U.S.-Europe relationship under recent administrations has exposed a critical dependency: Europeโs reliance on American military and political backing is not guaranteed without demonstrating its own reliability. Historical tensions over defense spending, divergent threat perceptions, and the shadow of Trump-era skepticism still loom over NATOโs cohesion, making Domenachโs call a reminder that credibility is not inherited but actively earned.
What Happens Next
European capitals will likely double down on messaging reforms, military modernization, and public diplomacy to shore up U.S. confidence, but internal disputes over Ukraine aid or defense budgets could undermine these efforts. Meanwhile, adversaries like Russia and China will closely monitor Europeโs resolve, probing for weaknesses in a bloc still grappling with its post-Cold War identity.
Bigger Picture
This moment reflects a broader shift in global alliances, where traditional power blocs must justify their relevance by aligning values with action. As democracies face authoritarian alternatives, Europeโs challenge is not just deterring threats but proving that its democratic modelโflawed as it may beโremains the most stable foundation for collective security.

