Splittelsen synes ikke mindre etter Ruttes besøk. Trump er like historieløs som før, kjenner ikke NATOs formål, og trusselen mot Grønland ligger der fremdeles. Han vil neppe ta inn over seg at han ikke orienterte NATO før angrepet, og at angrepet var ulovlig i henhold til internasjonale lover og regler. Selv en idiot kan forstå dette....... Også at han har tapt krigen mot Iran siden ingen mål er oppnådd. (Red.)
Trump criticises Nato as alliance chief describes meeting as 'very
frank'
8 hours ago
Bernd Debusmann
Jr,White House Reporterand
Claire Keenan
Reuters
Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte and US President Donald Trump during
a bilateral meeting in Davos, Switzerland in January 2026.
Donald Trump has again
attacked Nato for not supporting the US in the Iran war, following a private
meeting with its Secretary General Mark Rutte at the White House.
In a post shared to Truth Social
after the meeting, the US President said: "NATO WASN'T THERE WHEN WE
NEEDED THEM, AND THEY WON'T BE THERE IF WE NEED THEM AGAIN."
Meanwhile, Rutte has
described his meeting to CNN with Trump as "very
frank" and "very open", despite clear disagreements.
Ahead of the talks on
Wednesday, Trump had toyed with the idea of quitting the trans-Atlantic
military alliance after several Nato countries resisted his calls to help
reopen the Strait of Hormuz to ease rising global oil prices.
The White House did not disclose
details of the talk.
The Secretary General was at
the White House for over two hours on Wednesday, although it is unknown how
long the meeting with Trump was.
The meeting was expected to cajole and
convince Trump that it's in his interest, and America's, to stay in the Nato
alliance.
What is clear, however, is
that Trump still has deep misgivings about the alliance and the member
countries that he believes did not help the US enough before and during
Operation Epic Fury.
In recent weeks, Trump has
threatened to withdraw from the 32-member transatlantic alliance.
Asked about Nato's role in
the ongoing conflict with Iran, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on
Wednesday said in a direct quote from the president that Nato was "tested
and they failed".
Leavitt said Nato countries
had "turned their backs on the American people," who fund their
nations' defense, and that Trump would have a "very frank and candid
conversation" with the Nato chief.
Meanwhile, much of Rutte's
message to Trump appears to be that many European countries did not stand in
the way.
The Secretary General told
CNN that he pointed out that "the large majority of European nations has
been helpful with basing, with logistics, with overflights".
"It's therefore a
nuanced picture," Rutte said.
Whether or not that point -
and the Secretary General's own warm relationship with Trump - are enough for
the US president remains to be seen.
Asked if the world was safer
now than it was before the war, Rutte said "absolutely" and credited
that to Trump's "leadership" in degrading Iran's nuclear threats.
He added Nato members do not
see the war in Iran as illegal, and most agreed it was important to degrade
Iran's nuclear capabilities.
At the end of 2023, the US
Congress did vote to prohibit any US president from unilaterally withdrawing
from Nato without the approval of a two-thirds Senate majority or an act of
Congress.
The relationship between the
administration and the Nato alliance was already in a difficult place before
the war with Iran, largely as a result of disagreements over Trump's plans for
Greenland.
Trump included his
frustrations over Greenland in his Truth social post after the meeting with
Rutte, by saying: "REMEMBER GREENLAND, THAT BIG, POORLY RUN, PIECE OF
ICE!!!"
The conflict in Iran,
however, has taken Trump's grievances with Nato to new heights and created what
is perhaps the greatest challenge the alliance has faced in its history.

Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.