NATO’s Free Ride Ends Now: Rubio Exposes Europe’s Betrayal Over Strait of Hormuz
By Hotspotnews
In a no-holds-barred appearance on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show, Secretary of State Marco Rubio laid bare the ugly truth about NATO that conservatives have been shouting from the rooftops for years: our so-called European allies are happy to cash America’s defense checks but vanish when the bill comes due for real action.
The flashpoint? The critical Strait of Hormuz, where Iranian aggression has choked off vital oil shipments, driving up energy prices worldwide and threatening American economic interests. As the United States, under President Trump’s decisive leadership, moved to neutralize the threat and reopen the strait alongside Israel, European NATO members slammed the door shut. No basing rights. No overflight permissions. No support whatsoever. Their excuse? “It’s not our fight.”
Rubio didn’t mince words. The United States stations roughly 100,000 troops across Europe at an annual cost of about $60 billion to American taxpayers. These forces have been Europe’s security blanket for decades, deterring threats while many alliance members chronically underfund their own militaries and fall short of the 2% GDP defense spending goal. Yet when America calls on shared infrastructure to protect global sea lanes—routes that keep European factories running and homes heated—the response is a collective shrug and a firm “no thanks.”
This isn’t partnership; it’s parasitism. For too long, Europe has enjoyed the luxury of American military muscle while pouring resources into bloated welfare states, radical climate agendas, and open-border experiments. They’ve lectured the U.S. on multilateralism from the comfort of their protected borders, all while refusing to share the burdens of actual conflict. The Hormuz crisis exposes the rot at the heart of the transatlantic alliance: when it’s Article 5 and Europe needs saving, America answers the call without hesitation. When it’s America’s turn to secure vital interests against a rogue regime like Iran, Europe hides behind technicalities.
President Trump has been warning about this imbalance since day one of his first term. “America First” isn’t isolationism—it’s common sense. Why should U.S. families subsidize Europe’s defense while our own borders remain porous and our military readiness gets stretched thin? The refusal to assist in the Hormuz operation isn’t an isolated incident; it’s the predictable outcome of decades of one-sided “alliance” where the U.S. plays sugar daddy and Europe plays freeloader.
Rubio signaled that a full re-examination of NATO commitments is on the table. Good. It’s long overdue. Post-Cold War, the alliance has morphed from a bulwark against Soviet communism into an entitlement program for wealthy European nations that can’t be bothered to defend their own energy security. Secure shipping lanes through Hormuz benefit the entire West, yet only America and Israel showed the courage to act.
The Trump administration’s strong response to Iran—prioritizing peace through strength—has already begun restoring deterrence. But true strength starts at home with honest allies. If Europe won’t provide reciprocal access to bases and facilities, then it’s time to bring those 100,000 troops home. Redirect those $60 billion dollars toward fortifying America’s own defenses, securing our southern border, and investing in cutting-edge military technology that keeps us dominant without the dead weight.
Conservatives have long argued that alliances must be transactional, not charitable. Fair share or fair game. No more blank checks for nations that badmouth America abroad while relying on our protection. The Hormuz betrayal is the proof. Secretary Rubio and President Trump are delivering the accountability voters demanded.
It’s time to put America First for real. NATO can reform or fade into irrelevance—but the era of Europe’s free ride is over. American taxpayers deserve better, and under this administration, they’re finally getting it.

