The Ally Europe Overlooks – and Washington Should Reward. Romania is not merely speaking Atlanticist language. It is taking political risks, hosting U.S. power, buying American systems at scale and showing up when Washington asks.

Europe greeted Viktor Orban's defeat in Hungary as a morality play: a rebuke to populism, to illiberalism and, by extension, to Donald Trump. That is a satisfying interpretation for Brussels. It is also too simple. Hungary's election was, above all, a reckoning with 16 years of Orban rule and the accumulated weight of stagnation, fatigue and corruption.
Mircea Filipescu
14 apr. 2026, 18:29
The Ally Europe Overlooks - and Washington Should Reward. Romania is not merely speaking Atlanticist language. It is taking political risks, hosting U.S. power, buying American systems at scale and showing up when Washington asks.

Washington should draw a different lesson from the Hungarian vote. The real strategic question in Europe is not who talks most fluently about sovereignty, values or strategic autonomy. It is who still behaves like an ally when alliance carries a price.

On that test, Romania has begun to distinguish itself from much of Europe.

President Nicusor Dan understood something that many European leaders still resist admitting: the Trump White House is not looking for symbolic affection. It is looking for governments willing to move, to commit and to assume risk. Romania has done exactly that. At the inaugural Board of Peace meeting in Washington, Dan did not merely attend. He put Romania on the record as ready to help rebuild emergency services, schools and institutions such as the police and justice system. In the language of diplomacy, that was more than attendance. It was intent. Bucharest was signaling that it wanted to be present not only when security was discussed, but when order would eventually have to be rebuilt.

That same logic was visible in March, when Romania approved a U.S. request tied to operations against Iran, allowing refueling aircraft, surveillance assets and satellite-communications equipment to be stationed at Romanian air bases. Dan described the package as defensive.

Parliament approved it anyway. That matters. It is easy to praise America from a podium. It is harder to accept domestic criticism, regional exposure and strategic responsibility when Washington needs real support. Romania did.

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And this was not some improvisation by a government chasing a photo opportunity with the White House. Romania’s value to the United States is rooted in geography, infrastructure and years of hard cooperation. Deveselu hosts the U.S. Aegis Ashore site that forms part of NATO’s ballistic missile defense architecture. Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base – MK, in the language of the U.S. military – has been in use by American forces since 1999 and has become one of the key operating hubs on the Black Sea flank. At Campia Turzii, more than $100 million in U.S.-funded improvements have expanded the Romanian Air Force base’s capacity to host operations tied to regional security. At Otopeni, near Bucharest, the 90th Airlift Base remains part of the allied air-mobility network that underpins major multinational exercises and rapid reinforcement. This is not performative Atlanticism. It is a map.

The military relationship is just as clear in procurement. Romania is not dabbling in American systems. It is restructuring its force around them. The F-35 is not a talking point; it is an active program. Bucharest signed its Letter of Offer and Acceptance in November 2024 to procure 32 aircraft, becoming the 20th nation in the F-35 program. Patriot is not a slogan either. Romania originally moved to acquire seven Patriot systems; after donating one operational battery to Ukraine, Washington approved an additional Patriot sale in April 2025 to replace it. That makes the larger point unmistakable: Romania has not only bought into the U.S. security architecture, it has accepted the obligations that come with it.

The same pattern extends to long-range fires. Romania’s 54 HIMARS launchers were never just another shopping-list item. They represented a major bet on U.S. precision strike capability and interoperability. In 2024, that defense relationship moved beyond procurement into industrial depth when Lockheed Martin and Aerostar opened Europe’s first certified HIMARS sustainment center in Bacau. That is what a serious strategic partnership looks like in practice: not merely importing American weapons, but building the local industrial and maintenance ecosystem that keeps them operational in a crisis.

Nor is the land domain any less revealing. General Dynamics signed a contract to deliver up to 227 Piranha 5 wheeled armored vehicles to the Romanian Armed Forces under a technology-transfer and Romanian-production framework. The significance of that deal goes beyond armored vehicles. It shows that Washington and Bucharest can align strategic objectives with industrial footprint. Romania is not merely a customer. It is becoming a platform.

Citește și: Diana Șoșoacă, o nouă ieșire alarmistă după discursul lui Peter Magyar: ”Aceleași idei expansioniste ca Orban. Vor să ia și Maramureș, Crișana și Banatul”

The alliance is no longer visible only on runways, missile-defense sites and procurement ledgers. It is visible in cyberspace as well. On April 7, the FBI publicly identified Romania among the international partners involved in disrupting a GRU-linked APT28 operation targeting military, government and critical-infrastructure information. President Nicusor Dan praised the joint effort on X, highlighting the role of SRI and underscoring that Russia’s hybrid war against the West continues and that Romania must deepen its security cooperation with its Western allies.

That is why OECD accession matters so much. For Bucharest, entry into the OECD is not a bureaucratic side story; it is one of the country’s central strategic objectives – the next great step in anchoring Romania irreversibly inside the West after NATO and the European Union. Membership would do more than confer prestige. It would reinforce standards of governance, strengthen investor confidence and validate Romania’s claim to be a rules-based, pro-American anchor on NATO’s eastern flank. And because accession depends on the support of existing members, U.S. backing is not a courtesy. It is vital. If Washington wants to show that it still knows how to stand by the allies that stand by America, helping Romania advance to full OECD membership should be part of the answer.

All of this cuts against the prevailing mood in parts of Europe. In too many capitals, the instinct is to speak of European sovereignty while quietly relying on American power. Romania has chosen a harder and more useful course. It has opened bases, expanded interoperability, bought American systems at scale, embedded U.S. defense technology into its own force structure and shown political willingness to stand with Washington when the safer option would have been ambiguity.

That should matter to President Trump. Not because Romania flatters Washington, but because it delivers. If the Trump administration wants to change the way America deals with Europe, it does not need to punish the continent as a bloc. It needs to differentiate among allies. Countries that carry real weight for the United States should be treated as such. Countries that hedge, moralize and delay should not receive the same political credit as countries that assume risk, spend real money and make their territory available when history turns hard.

Romania has made its choice. It has chosen to be strategically useful, politically available and operationally relevant. In an era when many allies prefer the language of partnership without its burdens, that is no small thing. Washington should notice. And Washington should reward it.

Citește și: Reacția lui Traian Băsescu după înfrângerea lui Viktor Orban: „Trump şi Putin au aflat că există ceva mai puternic decât armele lor nucleare aducătoare de moarte…se numeşte ‘vot democratic’”

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