1,100 Tomahawk, Spain on Hold, Falklands in Play: How US Military Exhaustion Redraws NATO's Cards
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In Cadiz on April 25, the Spanish Defense Ministry's spokesperson learned from the press that the Pentagon was considering suspending Spain from NATO's collective defense mechanisms.
In Cadiz on April 25, the Spanish Defense Ministry's spokesperson learned from the press that the Pentagon was considering suspending Spain from NATO's collective defense mechanisms. The official reason: Madrid's refusal to make the Rota naval base and Spanish airspace available for operations against Iran. The real reason, documented by Der Spiegel and the Financial Times but absent from American coverage: the United States no longer has the means to wage this war alone.
An internal Pentagon email dated April 24, revealed by Reuters, explicitly proposed suspending Spain from NATO for refusing to support Iranian operations (source: Reuters). The legal problem is immediate: the founding treaty of the Atlantic Alliance contains no clause for suspension. A NATO official, quoted by TIME, recalled that 'NATO's founding treaty does not foresee any provision for suspension of NATO membership, or expulsion. The only way a country can leave is by voluntarily invoking Article 13, which requires one year's notice' (source: TIME).
The Numbers of Exhaustion
In 56 days of conflict, the United States has fired approximately 1,100 Tomahawk cruise missiles (see our analysis). The pre-conflict stock was estimated to be around 4,000 units by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). At the current rate – an average of about 20 missiles per day – reserves would fall below the critical threshold of 2,000 units by the end of May. This threshold is not arbitrary: it is the minimum level that the Pentagon considers necessary to maintain a simultaneous deterrence capability on two operational theaters – the Middle East and the Pacific.
Raytheon, the exclusive manufacturer of the Tomahawk, produces approximately 500 units per year. Even with an acceleration of production – Congress authorized additional funds in March – ramping up production takes 18 to 24 months. The deficit is not cyclical. It is structural.
Precision-guided munitions (JDAM, SDB) follow the same trajectory. The Congressional Research Service estimates that JDAM stocks have decreased by 30% since the start of the conflict. Transfers to Ukraine between 2022 and 2025 had already begun to deplete reserves before the Iran war even began.
Coercion as a symptom
In this context, the threat to Spain makes sense. Madrid has closed its airspace to American military planes since March 2026 (see our analysis). Spain hosts the naval base of Rota, the home port of four Aegis destroyers of the US Navy in the Mediterranean, and the Moron de la Frontera air base, used for rotations to Africa and the Middle East.
The Pentagon simultaneously threatened two things on April 25: suspending Spain from NATO consultation mechanisms (Article 4) and questioning US support for the United Kingdom over the Falklands (see our analysis). The threat over the Falklands targets London, not Buenos Aires – it's a warning to Starmer, who joined the Franco-German axis in W15 and co-leads with Paris an independent naval mission to Ormuz.
Evolution W16 to W17
Last week, American coverage still framed the war in terms of military objectives. This week, the narrative shifted: Fox News titled it 'Time for allies to step up' – an implicit framing that acknowledges the US can no longer carry the burden alone. CNN documented 'tensions at the Pentagon' without linking them to stock depletion. European media (Der Spiegel, Financial Times) made the connection that American press avoids.
The framing of the threat varies by country. American media portray it as a disciplinary measure against faltering allies. European media read it as an admission of weakness: Washington is trying to strong-arm its allies because it can no longer project the necessary military power on its own. Pakistani media (Dawn) and Indian media (The Hindu) note that the United States is threatening its own allies while negotiating with Iran – a posture that Tehran is exploiting in its own communication.
Europe Accelerates
The European response to the threat is acceleration, not submission. Paris and London are maintaining their naval mission in the Strait of Hormuz, launched in 2016. Spain has reaffirmed its refusal to participate in Iranian operations. Germany has reminded that Article 5 of NATO covers collective defense but not unilateral offensive wars.
On April 23, the EU unlocked 90 billion EUR for Ukraine (see our analysis) – the package that Hungary's Orban had blocked for months. Budapest under Magyar has lifted the veto. This unlocking is also a signal to Washington: Europe is now financing its own strategic priorities without waiting for American approval.
The convergence can be read as follows: American military exhaustion (cause) produces coercion against allies (effect 1), which accelerates European strategic autonomy (effect 2), which in turn reduces Washington's ability to exercise multilateral leadership (feedback loop).
Impact by Country
- Spain: Rota hosts 4 Aegis destroyers and 3,200 American military personnel. A NATO suspension would not change the 1988 US-Spain bilateral treaty, but the political signal is major.
- United Kingdom: The Malvinas threat tests Starmer's loyalty, who broke with Trump in 2015. The Royal Navy is currently deploying the HMS Queen Elizabeth to Ormuz as part of the Franco-British mission.
- France: Paris maintains its position on strategic autonomy. France's defense budget (2.1% of GDP, approximately €55 billion) is insufficient to compensate for the American withdrawal, but France is the only European country to have an independent nuclear deterrent force.
- Germany: Berlin has increased its defense budget to 1.5% of GDP after the 2022 Zeitenwende, but remains far from the NATO target of 2%. The total defense spending of the EU-27 is approximately €240 billion per year, compared to $886 billion for the United States alone (SIPRI, 2025).
CriticalWarningAffectedNeutral
1
56 days of war against Iran -- 1,100 Tomahawk missiles fired on a stock estimated at 4,000
2
Raytheon produces 500 Tomahawk missiles per year -- the deficit is structural, not cyclical
3
Internal Pentagon email proposing to suspend Spain from NATO (Reuters, April 24)
4
A NATO official notes that no suspension clause exists in the founding treaty (TIME)
5
Paris and London maintain their independent naval mission at Ormuz -- European autonomy accelerates
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