Spain entered 2026 as a NATO member in good standing. By the end of March, it had closed its airspace to US military aircraft involved in the Iran war, refused Washington’s request to use the Rota and Moron naval bases for offensive operations, and received a direct threat from President Trump to ‘cut off all trade with Spain.’ That is six weeks of geopolitical rupture compressed into a timeline that has few precedents in the postwar Atlantic alliance — and Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose government has held its position under sustained pressure from Washington, is now navigating the consequences.
The Decision and Its Immediate Fallout
Spain’s refusal to grant the US access to Rota and Moron for offensive operations against Iran was not a last-minute decision. Sanchez’s government had signalled from the earliest days of the conflict that Spain would not participate in or facilitate what it described as an ‘illegal war conducted outside the framework of international law.’ When Washington’s formal request for expanded base use arrived in early March, Madrid’s rejection was swift and unambiguous.
Trump’s response came on March 3. He posted on Truth Social that he would ‘cut off all trade with Spain’ and described Sanchez as a ‘puppet of the radical left’ who had betrayed the Atlantic alliance. Bloomberg reported that the threat specifically referenced Spain’s refusal to allow US aircraft to use bases on its soil, and that Trump suggested Spain’s NATO membership could be reconsidered if it continued to ‘obstruct American operations.’
Sanchez responded in language that was clear and carefully calibrated for a domestic Spanish audience. ‘We are not going to be complicit in something that is bad for the world and is also contrary to our values and interests, just out of fear of reprisals from someone,’ he said at a press conference in Madrid. He stopped short of naming Trump directly, describing the threatening party as ‘someone,’ a rhetorical choice that allowed him to maintain a formal posture of diplomatic respect while making the substance of his meaning unmistakeable.
On March 30, Spain went further: it closed its airspace entirely to all US military aircraft involved in the Iran conflict. The decision had immediate practical consequences. The US Air Force operates several transport and tanker routes across Spanish airspace on the approach to the Mediterranean and the Middle East; rerouting around Spanish territory added significant time and logistics cost to missions. The Pentagon did not comment publicly on the operational impact but moved at least 15 tanker aircraft from Spanish facilities to other NATO bases within the week.
The Trump Trade Threat: How Real Is It?
Trump’s threat to cut off all trade with Spain raised immediate questions about its legal and practical feasibility. Spain is a member of the European Union; trade between the US and Spain is governed by the same US-EU framework that applies to all 27 member states. A targeted trade embargo against a single EU member would be unprecedented and, under EU trade law, would require Brussels to respond collectively — effectively turning a US-Spain bilateral dispute into a US-EU trade war.
CNBC reported that the US Supreme Court had also struck down Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose arbitrary tariffs, complicating the legal pathway for any unilateral trade action against Spain. Several legal analysts cited by Fortune noted that while Trump could instruct the Commerce Department to investigate Spanish imports under various trade statutes, a comprehensive trade cutoff of the kind he described would face immediate legal challenge from both Congress and the European Commission.
Spain is not immune to economic pressure from Washington. Spain’s goods exports to the United States total approximately 14 billion euros annually, with automotive components, food products, and pharmaceutical goods representing significant sectors. A targeted tariff regime — even if not a complete embargo — could cause real damage to specific industries. The Spanish government has said it is prepared to absorb that pressure rather than reverse its position on the bases.
Spain in the Broader European Context
Spain’s position has been the most confrontational in Western Europe, but it has not been entirely isolated. France and Germany declined to participate in the Iran coalition and publicly criticised the strikes as violations of international law. Italy’s government, while more cautious in its public statements, ruled out sending ships to police the Hormuz Strait without a UN mandate. The overall picture is of a Western European bloc that provided no meaningful support for the US-Israeli military campaign and several explicit acts of non-cooperation.
Spain’s distinctiveness lies in the active measures it took: closing airspace, refusing base access, and openly absorbing Trump’s threats without backing down. Sanchez is now pursuing a diplomatic strategy that involves restoring contacts with Iran — counting on that relationship to provide Spain with better access to Hormuz transit once the strait reopens — while maintaining its formal NATO membership and refusing to be seen as an adversary of the alliance as such. It is a delicate balance that depends on the ceasefire talks in Islamabad producing an outcome that reopens the strait, and on Trump’s trade threats remaining threats rather than becoming implemented policy.
What This Actually Means
Spain has run the most significant test of intra-NATO dissent since France withdrew from the alliance’s integrated military command in 1966. The outcome so far is that a NATO member can refuse to facilitate US military operations, close its airspace to US warplanes, receive direct trade war threats from an American president, and remain in the alliance without formal consequence — because NATO has no mechanism to expel a member for refusing to participate in a non-Article-5 operation.
That is a precedent with implications well beyond Spain. It tells every NATO member that the cost of refusing to support an American war of choice — as opposed to an Article 5 collective defence obligation — is political pressure and trade threats, not expulsion. Whether that cost is tolerable depends on the government in question. For Sanchez, whose domestic political base strongly supports his position, it has been. For others, that calculation might differ. But the precedent now exists.
Sources
Bloomberg | CNBC | Euronews | Al Jazeera | Fortune | PBS NewsHour