Exclusive

'European elites have to pitch in': Steve Bannon says NATO has become 'a US protectorate, not an alliance'

16 January 2024, 19:46

Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon says that Europe has to contribute more to NATO
Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon says that Europe has to contribute more to NATO. Picture: Getty/LBC

By Kit Heren

Steve Bannon, the outspoken former adviser to Donald Trump, has branded NATO a "protectorate, not an alliance" as he called for European elites to "pitch in".

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

Mr Bannon, who wants a less interventionist US foreign policy, told LBC's Andrew Marr that NATO, which was set up after the Second World War to provide security against the Soviet Union, had become "an American security guarantee" for Europe.

NATO member states are meant to put 2% of their GDP into their annual military budgets. But just seven of 30 NATO member states in 2022, the latest figures available - despite Russia invading Ukraine, a NATO neighbour in February that year.

The seven who contributed 2% or more were the US, UK, Greece, Poland and the three Baltic states. Eight members met the required military spending rate the year before.

Mr Bannon, a controversial figure for his right-wing views, denied that Mr Trump wanted to "cut ties" with NATO if he regained the US presidency in November.

Read more: Donald Trump vows to 'take back' US from Biden after landslide victory in Iowa

Read more: Maine becomes second state to bar Donald Trump from running for president over 'insurrection'

Ex-Trump strategist Steve Bannon speaks to Andrew Marr 16/01 | Watch Again

Mr Trump got his re-election campaign off to a strong start on Monday by winning the Iowa caucus of Republican candidates for the party's nomination.

Mr Bannon, who served in Mr Trump's White House from 2016-2017, told Andrew:
"What we’ve always argued for, and I argued with the national security advisors of the individual countries, is we want it to be an alliance. That means, like England and like Poland, you have to meet the minimum of the 2% of GDP to throw into the pot."

He added that "more importantly, you have to have a military that has interoperability - it’s actually an alliance. It's not an alliance right now. It's basically an American security guarantee of European freedom and that can’t happen.

"You can’t have countries in Europe that have healthcare, six week vacations, pension funds, and the American people have none of that, because we have a trillion-dollar defence budget."

Ex-chief strategist to Trump Steve Bannon says they're 'training up 3000 people'

Mr Bannon claimed that "the wealthy in Europe… have dodged this bullet [of defence spending] since the Second World War. Outside of England and some partisan resistance in other parts of Europe, in Eastern Europe, we fought alone with England in World War Two.

"The elites abandoned us to fascism that time - we’re not going to allow it this time. The elites of Europe have got to pitch in". Many European countries fought in the Second World War.

Mr Bannon said that ensuring higher defence spending from other NATO members would also suit those countries.

"Europe doesn’t want to be a protectorate of the United States," he said. "We want a strong, robust alliance and we’ve wanted that from day one."

Mr Bannon, who is widely considered to have been an architect of Mr Trump's 2016 victory, left the White House in August 2017. He is said to have endured an up-and-down relationship with Mr Trump since then, with the former president calling him 'Sloppy Steve' at one point.

Donald Trump on Monday
Donald Trump on Monday. Picture: Getty

But Mr Bannon told Andrew that he would return to the White House to serve under Mr Trump if he was asked.

He also said that a group of 3,000 Trump-supporting would-be officials have been trained to operate the levers of power if his former boss returns to the White House.

Mr Bannon said that this would help Mr Trump bypass the so-called "deep state" that he claimed frustrated his efforts in his first term.

"These are people that have the populist MAGA, America first agenda," Mr Bannon said. "We're working on those policies now.

"He will 'hit the beach' with people that are like-minded and tough and know what we have to do this time."

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

A woman in her 50s was mauled to death in her own home in east London.

Woman mauled to death in XL Bully attack at east London home as police seize two dogs

Turkey Erdogan Eurovision

Turkey’s leader claims Eurovision Song Contest is a threat to family values

Labour's Diana Johnson has told LBC the department of health was 'defending itself' during the infected blood scandal.

‘The department of health was institutionally defending itself’, Labour MP tells LBC after infected blood scandal report

Iran Ebrahim Raisi

Iran’s president and foreign minister die in helicopter crash

Exclusive
Julian Assange's wife calls for extradition case against WikiLeaks founder to be abandoned by US after High Court win

Julian Assange's wife calls for extradition case against WikiLeaks founder to be abandoned by US after High Court win

France Cannes 2024 The Apprentice Red Carpet

The Apprentice, about a young Donald Trump, premieres in Cannes

A 'heat dome' is forecast to hit over the half-term.

UK to enjoy 800-mile ‘heat dome’ with temperatures of up to 25C in parts of country over half term

King Charles and Queen Camilla in attendance of the RHS Chelsea Flower Show

King Charles and Queen Camilla greet crowds at Chelsea Flower Show as they visit garden designed by children

Haiti Airport

Haiti’s main airport reopens nearly three months after violence forced it closed

Israel Palestinians

International Criminal Court seeks arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leaders

Hardline 'Butcher of Tehran' Ebrahim Raisi's death opens door for escalating Iran-West confrontation

Hardline 'Butcher of Tehran' Ebrahim Raisi's death opens door for escalating Iran-West confrontation

Why everyone in their twenties seems to be running - and why I’m one of them

Why everyone in their twenties seems to be running - and why I’m one of them

Rishi Sunak has apologised for the infected blood scandal.

'This is a day of shame': Rishi Sunak apologises ‘wholeheartedly’ for infected blood scandal after 'chilling' report

Kate Roughley, 37, strapped the Genevieve Meehan face down on to a bean bag

Parents will 'never forgive' nursery worker who killed daughter by strapping her face down and ignoring cries

Children were used as "objects for research" the final report of the Infected Blood Inquiry has found.

The school where dozens died: Only 30 of 122 boys at Treloar College are alive after experiments with infected blood

Pictures of the Week-North America-Photo Gallery

Cohen says he stole from Trump’s company as key hush money trial witness quizzed