
Trump Denounces NATO Allies Over Iran Support and Dismisses Starmer as ‘Not Churchill’
In Oval Office remarks, the US president accused the UK, Italy, Germany and Spain of failing to support Washington’s military campaign against Iran, and linked the UK prime minister’s resignation to his energy and immigration policies.
President Donald Trump launched a sweeping verbal assault on key European NATO allies from the Oval Office, accusing the United Kingdom, Italy, Germany and Spain of refusing to assist the United States during its military confrontation with Iran. Speaking to reporters after UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his resignation, Trump said London had denied Washington access to British bases for a bombing campaign, and that Rome and Madrid had similarly withheld support. He threatened to review the stationing of US forces in Italy and Spain, and dismissed Starmer as “not Winston Churchill,” while also describing him as “a very nice man” who had “hurt himself very badly” through decisions on North Sea oil and immigration.
Viewed from Washington, the president’s remarks reflect a longstanding grievance over burden-sharing within the Atlantic alliance. Trump claimed the United States had spent trillions of dollars over decades and hundreds of millions annually to protect Europe from threats including Russia, yet when he asked allies for help in what he called “small things” related to Iran, they refused. White House officials frame this as a test of reciprocity: if European partners are unwilling to provide tangible support when requested, the US may reconsider its own security commitments. On Starmer’s departure, Trump linked the prime minister’s political downfall directly to energy and immigration policies, arguing that restrictions on North Sea extraction and a shift to renewables had alienated voters.
In European capitals, the reaction has been a mixture of silence and alarm. The Italian government, led by Giorgia Meloni, has opted not to respond publicly to the repeated criticism, according to officials in Rome. British government figures have not issued a formal rebuttal, though analysts in London note that the basing dispute had already strained bilateral ties. Diplomats in Brussels and other NATO member states view Trump’s linkage of alliance solidarity to specific operational support as a departure from the principle of collective defence, raising concerns that Article 5 commitments could be conditioned on ad hoc political transactions. The new NATO Secretary-General, Mark Rutte, is due in Washington for meetings with Trump and Pentagon officials, a visit now freighted with the task of repairing trust.
The immediate practical implications remain uncertain. No formal decision to relocate US forces from Italy or Spain has been announced, and the Pentagon has not commented on any review. However, Trump’s threat, combined with his broader questioning of NATO’s value, injects fresh uncertainty into the alliance’s deterrence posture at a time when European governments are already grappling with the economic and security fallout of the Iran conflict. Rutte’s talks, scheduled to run from Tuesday to Thursday, are expected to focus on reaffirming mutual defence obligations and clarifying what Washington expects from allies in future contingencies. For now, the transatlantic rift over Iran has widened into a public test of the alliance’s political cohesion.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Trump harshly accuses European allies of failing to support the US in the Iran conflict, naming Italy, Germany, and the UK. European leaders are portrayed as unreliable, while Washington claims trillions spent on NATO. The attack fuels fears of a transatlantic rift and calls collective defense commitments into question.
Trump sends a sharp message to Europe ahead of his meeting with NATO chief Rutte, accusing allies of failing to back Washington in the Iran confrontation. The criticism, though lacking operational details, comes at a sensitive moment for regional security. Gulf capitals watch with pragmatism, aware that US pressure could reshape defense balances.
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