**đ¨âď¸ BREAKING: Portugal Sends a Signal NATO Canât Ignore â Strategic Calculations Shift Overnight**
Lisbon / Brussels / Washington â February 17, 2026
In a move that has stunned NATO headquarters and forced urgent recalculations in Washington, Lisbon and several Eastern European capitals, Portugal has officially notified the alliance that it is suspending participation in two key U.S.-led fighter programs â the F-35 Lightning II and the Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) initiative â and will instead accelerate procurement of Saab JAS 39 Gripen E/F fighters as its primary multi-role platform for the next two decades.
The announcement, delivered by Portuguese Defence Minister Nuno Melo during an extraordinary press conference at 11:47 a.m. local time, is the most explicit and public European rejection of Lockheed Martinâs F-35 dominance since Franceâs 1966 withdrawal from NATOâs integrated military command. Portugal currently operates 25 aging F-16MLU aircraft; the fleet was scheduled to be replaced entirely by 38â46 F-35A jets under a letter of offer accepted in 2023. That program has now been âindefinitely paused,â with Lisbon citing âunacceptable lifecycle costs, lack of genuine technology transfer, and increasing strategic dependence on a single non-European supplier.â

Melo was blunt:
âPortugal remains fully committed to Article 5 and collective defence. What we are no longer committed to is strategic subordination disguised as interoperability. The F-35 delivers capability at a price â financial, industrial and sovereign â that Portugal can no longer justify. The Gripen offers comparable â in some respects superior â performance at one-sixth the operating cost, with full source-code access, domestic maintenance sovereignty and European supply-chain resilience. This is not anti-American. It is pro-Portuguese and pro-European autonomy.â
The timing is explosive. It comes just 72 hours after Prime Minister Mark Carneyâs Canada announced the same Gripen pivot, and only weeks after persistent U.S. threats of 25% tariffs on European goods â including Portuguese cork, wine, olive oil, footwear and automotive components â unless the EU agrees to sweeping concessions on digital taxes, agricultural subsidies and critical-minerals export rules.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte called an emergency North Atlantic Council meeting for tomorrow morning. Behind closed doors, alliance officials admit the dual CanadaâPortugal Gripen announcements represent âthe most serious fracture in NATO defence-industrial cohesion since the end of the Cold War.â
Pentagon spokesman Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder issued a terse response:

âThe United States is deeply disappointed by Portugalâs decision to diverge from the allianceâs agreed F-35 path. The Lightning II remains the cornerstone of NATO airpower. Fragmentation of fighter fleets risks interoperability gaps that adversaries will exploit. We will engage urgently with our Portuguese allies to understand and address their concerns.â
Former President Donald Trump, whose tariff threats helped catalyse the pivot, reacted on Truth Social at 7:19 a.m. ET:
âPortugal just stabbed America in the back again! Theyâre buying Swedish planes instead of our beautiful F-35 because their leaders are WEAK and hate America! We protect them, we pay for NATO, and they spit in our face! Time to make them PAY â BIG TIME!!!â
The post has been viewed more than 81 million times but has drawn sharp criticism from U.S. defense-industry executives and congressional Republicans from Lockheed-heavy states. Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA) called the move âa serious blow to American jobs and alliance unity,â while Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) urged the Pentagon to âimmediately reassess technology-sharing restrictionsâ that may have pushed Portugal (and Canada) away.
The strategic implications are profound. Portugalâs Azores air bases are vital for U.S. power projection into the Atlantic and Mediterranean. A Gripen fleet would require separate logistics, training pipelines, datalinks and maintenance ecosystems â creating exactly the kind of fragmentation NATO has spent decades trying to avoid. Eastern European members â Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, the Baltics â who rely heavily on U.S. security guarantees are particularly alarmed, fearing the move signals a broader European drift toward strategic autonomy.
Warren Buffett, who has rarely commented on defense policy, broke his silence this morning in a statement released through Berkshire Hathaway:
âWhen you threaten your closest allies with tariffs and then try to force them to buy your weapons, you donât strengthen the alliance â you weaken it. Portugal and Canada are choosing capability, jobs, and independence. The U.S. should be asking why our partners feel the need to diversify away from us, not punishing them for it.â
Buffettâs words carry extra weight because Berkshire holds significant stakes in consumer-goods companies, railroads, and utilities that would be directly harmed by prolonged transatlantic friction.

Acting President JD Vance has not yet commented publicly, but White House sources say he is âreviewing all optionsâ and facing intense internal debate. Several Republican senators from border and defense-contractor states have privately urged de-escalation, with one senior GOP aide telling reporters: âWe canât afford to lose Portugal and Canada as partners over fighter-jet contracts. The F-35 is great, but alienating NATO allies helps nobody.â
The episode has become a defining early test for Carney and for the broader European shift toward strategic autonomy. Many analysts now describe it as proof that Trumpâs policy preferences can still move markets and headlines â but his ability to force compliance has been dramatically curtailed since losing executive authority.
As Lisbon prepares to finalize the Gripen contract and Washington weighs its next move, the world is watching to see whether this is a temporary rupture or the beginning of a permanent fracture in the transatlantic security architecture.
The next 72 hours will show whether diplomacy can contain the damage â or whether the âNATO Detonationâ becomes the spark for a much larger unraveling.