đź“° Full Story
U.S. officials have discussed whether to allow additional NATO allies to host U.S. nuclear-capable forces, the Financial Times reported on June 2-3, 2026.
Citing people briefed on the talks, the report said Washington signalled openness to expanding NATO’s nuclear-sharing arrangements beyond the current group of European hosts, with Poland and some Baltic states among those expressing interest.
Conversations are taking place within NATO channels but any agreement is not imminent, and U.S., Pentagon and NATO spokespeople did not immediately comment.
The talks come amid Russia’s war in Ukraine, concerns on NATO’s eastern flank, planned U.S. reductions in conventional forces in Europe, and public U.S. pressure on allies to boost defence spending.
Experts note that forward-deploying U.S. dual-capable aircraft and weapons would require years of planning, construction of specialised vaulting and security measures, and political approvals in host countries.
The Financial Times is the primary source for the report; subsequent coverage has elaborated on operational and diplomatic implications.
đź”— Based On
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Discussion clarifies that NATO nuclear-sharing is a joint, consent-based arrangement and that any move to expand hosting would be a slow, political process aimed at bolstering eastern deterrence and preserving U.S. influence in Europe, while likely increasing tensions with Russia and affecting intra-alliance dynamics.







đź’¬ Commentary