Trump delivers ‘rambling’ mixed bag at NATO

President Donald Trump’s careening performance at the NATO summit in Turkey has reporters relating stories of “menacing threats” and “comical misnomers,” “sabre-rattling” and “tremendous love,” but while the conference got off to a rocky start, analysts assert that “alliance leaders, who had feared the worst, will hail US president’s renewed support for Article 5 as key victory.”

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According to the Guardian, “Having arrived at NATO’s annual summit under a familiar cloud of resentment and grievance, Donald Trump’s farewell message on Wednesday was an unlikely tale of love and darkness.” While speaking to reporters with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump declared, “It was a great meeting. There was a lot of love in that room today, a lot of unity. It couldn’t have gone much better.”

This surprised everyone, reports the Guardian’s Robert Tait, writing, “It was quite the transformation from earlier, when the US president had sat beside NATO’s secretary general, Mark Rutte, and spouted a well-rehearsed litany of complaints, including a perceived lack of support on the war with Iran, and Spain’s refusal to comply with new defence spending targets.” Trump had spent much of the previous day “spewing bile” over his “well-worn gripe about Greenland,” and European leaders were reportedly so worried that he was in a bad mood after the American team lost to Belgium in the World Cup that they agreed to avoid the subject. Then he startled NATO leaders during a private meeting where he delivered none of his usual attacks, instead telling allies, “We want to remain with you.”

According to Guardian reporter Dan Sabbagh, Trump concluded the summit “by hosting a rambling press conference that barely addressed NATO topics, but where he praised Turkey’s strongman president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, talked up the US economy and said he was ‘No 1 on TikTok.’” He also took a moment to rant that the Iranian leadership “scum,” and to reiterate his want of Greenland.

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In the end, “the final summit declaration, signed off by Trump and 31 other alliance leaders, affirmed the countries’ ‘ironclad commitment’ to Article 5, which declares that an attack one NATO member is an attack on them all.” But while this will be viewed by NATO leaders as a win for the future of the alliance, the conference still concluded with troubling questions unanswered.

“There was also no announcement of the date for the next leaders’ summit, due to happen in Albania, where anti-Trump and anti-government protests are taking place, amid hints it would not happen until 2028,” notes Sabbagh. “NATO summits have not always taken place annually but the overwhelming concern in parts of Europe is that Trump’s grandstanding at such events risks giving hope to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, undermining deterrence and alliance unity.

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