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Spain is a terrible partner. That is what the president said about a NATO ally… at a NATO summit… while sitting next to the NATO secretary general. Then he turned to his Treasury Secretary and ordered him to cut off all trade with Spain. “Including visits,” Trump added. Madrid had done two things wrong. It refused to let the U.S. use Spanish air bases for the Iran war. And it was the only NATO member to reject the 5% GDP defense spending target… calling it “unreasonable and counterproductive.” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez wrote to NATO chief Rutte that “it is not about spending more, but spending better.” Trump’s response came on Wednesday. “Spain is a wasted cause. We don’t want to do any trade business with Spain anymore,” he said. He told Treasury Secretary Bessent to “cut it off.” The U.S. and Spain traded $42 billion in goods last year. Spain hosts two U.S. military facilities… a naval base at Rota and an air field at Morón… both used by the Sixth Fleet. Rutte did not push back. He later noted that Spain had raised its spending. But in the room, the message landed. The alliance built to protect members does not protect members who say no to the president. Spain’s prime minister’s office said it “maintains an excellent relationship with the U.S., and it is not our intention for that to change.” Trump’s intention was different. |
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BREAKING Trump Demanded Greenland at the NATO Summit — and Compared Denmark’s History to Nazi Occupation |
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At the same summit where he attacked Spain, Trump renewed his demand for the U.S. to take Greenland… a territory of Denmark, a fellow NATO member sitting across the table. “Greenland is very important for the United States, but it’s not important for Denmark,” he said. Then he brought up the Nazis. “When Denmark was overrun by the Nazis in less than one day… Hitler beat them out in one day, took over… they asked us to take care of Greenland,” Trump said. “In fact, we took Greenland, and then stupidly we gave it back.” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Greenland is “not for sale” and that Denmark would “defend every inch of NATO, including our own territory.” France’s Macron warned that in the alliance, “there are rules of solidarity to ensure that we do not attack one another.” Trump has pushed for Greenland since 2019. But demanding it at a NATO summit… to the face of the country that owns it… while comparing that country to its darkest chapter was a first. The alliance built to prevent territorial aggression spent the day hearing a member demand territory from another member. |
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EXPOSED Trump Gave Ukraine a Patriot Missile License Without Telling Lockheed Martin or RTX — the Companies That Own the Technology |
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“A little birdie told me this,” the president said. Then he turned to Zelenskyy and told him the U.S. would give Ukraine a license to build Patriot missile interceptors. “Make them yourself,” Trump added. “This way you can’t complain that we’re not giving you enough.” The Patriot system is made by Lockheed Martin and RTX Corporation. CBS News confirmed that neither firm had been told before Trump made the announcement. The system involves some of the most guarded defense electronics in the U.S. arsenal. It is the only weapon in Ukraine’s hands that can stop Russian ballistic missiles. Trump said the companies would “work with” Ukraine but admitted they had not been briefed. “It’s very complex, actually, but you’ll figure out the complexity quickly,” he told Zelenskyy. NATO also pledged €70 billion in military aid to Ukraine for 2026 and 2027. Zelenskyy had asked for the license on CBS in May. He got it as a casual aside at a bilateral meeting. The decision to hand over production rights for the most advanced air defense system in the Western world was made without a contract, without a vote in Congress, and… by the president’s own words… without the companies that built it knowing it was coming. Lockheed Martin’s stock rose 2.1% on Wednesday. The market heard a new buyer was joining the line. The company still had not been asked. |
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DEVELOPING 500 Dead from Ebola in Congo. No Approved Vaccine. Health Workers on Strike. And the World Is Watching a NATO Summit. |
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While 32 heads of state argued about defense spending in Ankara… more than 500 people were dead from Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The WHO said Tuesday the outbreak is “still expanding.” There is no approved vaccine for the Bundibugyo strain causing it. The first clinical trial started July 2. As of July 4, there were 1,561 confirmed cases and 506 deaths. More than 10,000 contacts are being tracked. Health workers in the worst-hit province of Ituri went on strike over unpaid wages. WHO’s top official in Congo said, “We would like to say it is stabilizing, but frankly, we cannot say it yet.” An American citizen was evacuated to Germany after catching the virus. A French doctor tested positive after returning from Congo. The U.S. restricted entry from Congo, Uganda, and South Sudan in May. But there has been no summit. No industry forum. No $50 billion in deals. NATO members committed €70 billion to Ukraine’s military this week. The WHO’s full budget for health emergencies is $2.9 billion a year. The outbreak killing hundreds in real time does not sell jets or secure alliances. So it does not get a summit. It gets a weekly PDF. |
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They rely on the shadows. |