Or who, exactly, the enemy was.… The maps were wrong. They still showed NATO as a single, clean shape—thirty-two countries shaded in calm blue, as if unity were a geographic fact. But in the operations room beneath Brussels, the officers had stopped looking at maps months ago. They watched bandwidth. “Split traffic again,” said Colonel Ionescu, pointing at the wall of live feeds. “U.S. channels are throttling European command relays.” No one looked surprised. Since the Greenland crisis of 2025–2026, the alliance had begun to behave less like a bloc and more like a negotiation that never ended. The Americans called it “burden correction.” The Europeans called it something else, quietly, in their own languages. A technician pulled up Arctic satellite imagery—synthetic aperture radar overlays, the same systems once used to track Russian armor in Ukraine. Now they were watching each other. “Pituffik base expansion confirmed,” she said. “New runway segments. Inc...