
Trump Claims ‘Tremendous Love’ at NATO Summit After Publicly Berating Allies
The Ankara gathering concluded with a formal pledge of unity and €70 billion in Ukraine aid, even as the US president threatened trade retaliation against Spain and renewed demands over Greenland.
The NATO summit in Ankara ended on 8 July 2026 with US President Donald Trump describing an atmosphere of “tremendous love” and “enormous unity” among the 32 allies, a marked shift from the public threats and recriminations he had levelled at partners only hours earlier. The final communiqué, adopted by all members, reaffirmed the collective defence commitment under Article 5 and set out a modernisation agenda that includes new procurement worth more than $50 billion, expanded manufacturing capacity, and the integration of advanced artificial intelligence into alliance capabilities.
According to the declaration, allies pledged €70 billion in military equipment, support and training for Ukraine in 2026, with a commitment to maintain at least the same level in 2027. European diplomatic sources indicated that Germany, the Baltic states, Poland and the United Kingdom had pushed for a two-year financial guarantee to signal resolve to Moscow, while Italy resisted a binding multi-year figure. The text also reiterated that Iran must never acquire a nuclear weapon, a point linked to the ongoing military exchanges between US forces and Iranian targets that Trump, speaking to reporters, predicted would be “over very quickly”.
Before the closed-door session, Trump had publicly threatened to halt all trade with Spain, calling it a “terrible partner” for refusing to meet the 5 percent of GDP defence spending target and for denying Washington access to Spanish bases and airspace for operations against Iran. The European Commission responded by stating it expects the United States to honour existing trade agreements, noting that trade policy for EU member states is conducted at the Union level. Separately, Trump repeated his claim that Greenland should be controlled by the United States, prompting Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen to declare that the territory is not for sale and that Denmark is prepared to defend “every centimetre of NATO territory”.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte told the closing press conference that the summit had demonstrated the alliance is “stronger than ever” and that disputes among friends strengthen relationships. Diplomatic sources cited by German-language media reported that behind closed doors Trump adopted a conciliatory tone and did not raise the issues of Greenland or Spain, a contrast with his public remarks. The formal outcome preserves allied unity on paper, but the implementation of the Ukraine funding pledge and the resolution of trade tensions now depend on national decisions in the months ahead, with the next NATO defence ministerial meeting expected to review progress on the Ankara commitments.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Continental European press | −0.40 | critical |
Trump contradicts himself: after attacking allies, he now speaks of love.
The contrast between previous statements and current ones is emphasized to highlight inconsistency.
Does not mention Trump's specific criticisms of Denmark and Spain, which would have made the contradiction more evident.
Trump stages a script: first threats, then happy ending.
The event is described as a theatrical performance, emphasizing the contradiction between attacks and praise.
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