In a stunning geopolitical shift that could redefine global security for decades, four of America’s closest allies—Australia, Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand—have formally applied to join the European Union’s SAFE Defense Program. The move, revealed through leaked European Commission documents, signals the rapid construction of a post-American security architecture, one that sidelines Washington at a moment of growing political unpredictability in the United States. Expected to be approved by March 15, 2026, the applications mark the most serious challenge yet to U.S. dominance over allied defense systems.

SAFE, originally designed as a European Union defense financing and production framework, already manages €150 billion for 27 EU member states. Canada’s admission in December 2025 as the first non-European member was initially dismissed in Washington as an anomaly. However, new evidence shows it was merely a test case. Since August 2025, EU defense leaders have quietly developed a formal pathway—known as the Framework for Allied Non-EU Partners (FAUP)—to integrate trusted democracies into Europe’s defense ecosystem, deliberately bypassing American defense structures.
The scale of the proposed cooperation is unprecedented. Australia has pledged tens of billions in long-term investment tied to rare earth minerals and advanced materials. Japan has proposed establishing multiple high-tech production centers in Eastern Europe, while South Korea aims to resolve Europe’s ammunition shortage through a massive artillery manufacturing complex. New Zealand, though smaller economically, is offering access to critical Five Eyes intelligence-sharing infrastructure. Together, these commitments could expand SAFE’s budget to €340 billion by 2030, effectively locking U.S. defense firms out of hundreds of billions of euros in future contracts.
For Washington, the consequences are severe. Pentagon assessments warn that SAFE’s expansion could reduce demand for American weapons systems by as much as 40% over the next two decades. U.S. defense giants such as Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman face an estimated $290 billion in lost revenue between 2026 and 2040. More importantly, the United States risks losing the strategic leverage it has long derived from allies’ dependence on American military protection.

This shift is not driven by anti-American sentiment, but by eroding trust. Polling among allied defense officials shows confidence in long-term U.S. security commitments has collapsed, fueled by years of tariff threats, treaty skepticism, and unpredictable leadership. European officials are increasingly candid, describing SAFE as a tool to achieve “strategic autonomy for democracies that can no longer rely on American consistency.” For U.S. allies, diversification has become a necessity, not a choice.
With approval votes scheduled for March and joint production contracts expected by mid-2026, the realignment is already in motion. European leaders are preparing to formally announce a major expansion of SAFE’s budget, signaling that the post-American security order is no longer theoretical. For the first time in 75 years, America’s closest allies have both the resources and the political will to reduce their dependence on Washington—and the global balance of power may be entering a historic new phase.