European Countries Take the Long View on Hormuz as Trump Seeks Quick Military Win

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While Donald Trump pushed for a quick military win at the Strait of Hormuz, European nations took a longer-term view, declining to send warships and arguing that sustainable solutions to the crisis required diplomatic foundations rather than naval deployments. Trump’s warnings about NATO’s future were seen by European leaders as reflecting an appetite for quick results that ignored the complexity of the situation and the risks of unintended escalation. European governments argued instead for a patient, multilateral approach that addressed the root causes of the crisis rather than its immediate symptoms.
Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz made the case for the long view most explicitly, arguing from historical precedent that military campaigns tended to produce short-term effects but rarely achieved the durable political outcomes that justified them. His defense minister Boris Pistorius added the practical dimension, questioning whether European ships could make any meaningful contribution to a situation that had already engaged the full resources of the American Navy without decisive effect. Together, they presented a German position grounded in strategic realism.
Keir Starmer of the United Kingdom acknowledged the urgency of the situation while declining to be rushed into military commitments. He promised a viable plan developed through broad international consultation and confirmed the UK would not act without proper multilateral backing. Trump remained critical but appeared to retain hope of eventual British engagement.
Italy, France, Greece, Japan, and Australia all declined participation. The EU confirmed that Operation Aspides would not be expanded after Monday’s meeting. Foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas noted the absence of member state appetite for changing the mission’s scope. Estonia’s foreign minister continued to press for strategic clarity from Washington and Tel Aviv.
The military conflict continued with fresh Israeli strikes on Iranian cities, retaliatory Iranian missile fire, and drone attacks on UAE energy and air infrastructure. Iran rejected ceasefire proposals and warned against US ground deployment. US military losses climbed to 13 dead and over 200 wounded, and rights groups placed the total Iranian death toll at more than 1,800 people, with the majority being civilians.

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