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Trump casts doubt on NATO solidarity, despite it aiding the US after Sept. 11

Trump casts doubt on NATO solidarity, despite it aiding the US after Sept. 11
NATO military forces during static display after "Exercise Steadfast Dart 2025" at the Smardan Training Area in Smardan, Romania, on February 19, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 07 March 2025

Trump casts doubt on NATO solidarity, despite it aiding the US after Sept. 11

Trump casts doubt on NATO solidarity, despite it aiding the US after Sept. 11
  • Trump also suggested that the US might abandon its commitments to the alliance if member countries don’t meet defense spending targets
  • Last year, NATO’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said a record 23 of NATO’s 32 member nations had hit the military alliance’s defense spending target

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Thursday expressed uncertainty that NATO would come to the US’s defense if the country were attacked, though the alliance did just that after Sept. 11 — the only time in its history that the defense guarantee has been invoked.
Trump also suggested that the US might abandon its commitments to the alliance if member countries don’t meet defense spending targets, a day after his pick for NATO ambassador assured senators that the administration’s commitment to the military alliance was “ironclad.”
Trump’s comments denigrating NATO, which was formed to counter Soviet aggression during the Cold War, are largely in line with his yearslong criticism of the alliance, which he has accused of not paying its fair share toward the cost of defense. But they come at a time of heightened concern in the Western world over Trump’s cozy relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has long seen NATO as a threat, and as the US president seeks to pressure Ukraine into agreeing to a peace deal with the country that invaded it three years ago.




US President Donald Trump reacts at the Oval Office at the White House in Washington on March 6, 2025. (REUTERS)

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth sent the alliance into upheaval last month when he said in a speech that the US would not participate in any peacekeeping force in Ukraine, which is not a NATO member, and would not defend any country that participated in it if attacked by Russia.
Trump said Thursday in the Oval Office that other countries would not come to the defense of the US — though they have done exactly that, in the only instance that the Article 5 defense guarantee was invoked.
“You know the biggest problem I have with NATO? I really, I mean, I know the guys very well. They’re friends of mine. But if the United States was in trouble, and we called them, we said, ‘We got a problem, France. We got a problem, couple of others I won’t mention. Do you think they’re going to come and protect us?’ They’re supposed to. I’m not so sure.”
Article 5 was invoked after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, leading to NATO’s largest operation in Afghanistan. France’s military participated in the operation.
“We are loyal and faithful allies,” French President Emmanuel Macron responded Thursday, expressing “respect and friendship” toward US leaders.
“I think we’re entitled to expect the same,” he said.
Macron invoked “centuries-old history,” namechecking the Marquis de Lafayette, a 19-year-old French nobleman, who was a major-general in the American Continental Army during the Revolutionary War, and Gen. John Pershing, commander of the American army in France during World War I. Macron added that a few days ago, he met American World War II veterans who landed on Omaha Beach as part of the D-Day invasion of Nazi-occupied France.
France and the US “have always been there for each other,” Macron said.




France's President Emmanuel Macron gestures as he addresses the media during a press conference in Brussels on March 6, 2025, to discuss continued support for Ukraine and European defense. (AFP)

When asked Thursday if it he was making it US policy that the US would not defend NATO countries that don’t meet military spending targets, Trump said, “well, I think it’s common sense, right? If they don’t pay, I’m not going to defend them. No, I’m not going to defend them.”
Trump has suggested since his 2016 presidential campaign that the US under his leadership might not comply with the alliance’s mutual defense guarantees and would only defend countries that met targets to commit 2 percent of their gross domestic products on military spending.
The US is the most powerful nation of the seven-decade alliance, has the largest economy among members and spends more on defense than any other member.
The US was one of 12 nations that formed NATO following World War II to counter the threat posed by the Soviet Union to Western European during the Cold War. Its membership has since grown to 32 countries, and its bedrock mutual defense guarantee, known as Article 5, states that an attack on one member is considered an attack on all.
Trump on Thursday also seemed to suggest the US commitment to NATO might be leveraged in his trade war as he seeks to target what he says are unfair trade policies with other nations, including the European Union.
“I view NATO as potentially good, but you’ve got to get, you’ve got to get some good thinking in NATO. It’s very unfair, what’s been happening,” Trump said. “Until I came along, we were paying close to 100 percent of NATO. So think of it, we’re paying 100 percent of their military, and they’re screwing us on trade.”
On Wednesday, Trump’s choice for NATO ambassador, Matt Whitaker, said at his confirmation hearing that in regards to the US commitment to the NATO alliance and specifically Article 5, “It will be ironclad.”
Last year, NATO’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said a record 23 of NATO’s 32 member nations had hit the military alliance’s defense spending target.
Trump has taken credit for countries meeting those targets because of his threats, and Stoltenberg himself has said Trump was responsible for getting other nations to increase their spending.


UK Jewish groups condemn Israeli minister for inviting far-right figure Tommy Robinson

UK Jewish groups condemn Israeli minister for inviting far-right figure Tommy Robinson
Updated 24 sec ago

UK Jewish groups condemn Israeli minister for inviting far-right figure Tommy Robinson

UK Jewish groups condemn Israeli minister for inviting far-right figure Tommy Robinson
  • ‘Thug’ represents ‘very worst of Britain’: Board of Deputies of British Jews, Jewish Leadership Council
  • ‘Israel is sowing division, supporting and promoting those that platform hate and making our country unsafe’: Baroness Sayeeda Warsi

LONDON: An Israeli minister has been criticized for inviting far-right UK figure Tommy Robinson to visit the country.

Members of the UK’s Jewish community condemned the move, with the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council branding him “the very worst of Britain.”

Robinson has been invited by Israel’s minister for the diaspora and combating antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, as a “courageous leader on the front line against radical Islam.”

The invitation, which Robinson has accepted, was extended in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on a synagogue in Manchester that left two people dead this week.

The Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council criticized the invite as coming in the community’s “darkest hour.”

In a statement, they said: “Tommy Robinson is a thug who represents the very worst of Britain. His presence undermines those genuinely working to tackle Islamist extremism and foster community cohesion.

“Minister Chikli has proven himself to be a diaspora minister in name only. In our darkest hour, he has ignored the views of the vast majority of British Jews, who utterly and consistently reject Robinson and everything he stands for.”

The decision drew criticism from other sections of UK society. The first Muslim woman to serve in a Cabinet role, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, wrote on X: “The Israeli Minister inviting Tommy Robinson, a man with multiple convictions for violence and fraud to Israel in response to the horrific Manchester attack. Let that sink in.

“At a time all communities in the UK are uniting to support our Jewish community as they grieve, the state of Israel is sowing division in our country, supporting and promoting those that platform hate and making our country unsafe.

“It’s time for all right thinking people to call out this irresponsible and deeply dangerous behaviour from Israel.”

Sunder Katwala, director of the British Future think tank, said: “Tommy Robinson is a voice of prejudice and division. There should be cross-party and multi-faith pressure on the Israeli government to withdraw its invitation.

“Most British Jewish voices have consistently been clear that they reject Robinson’s bogus claim to be an ally of their community. It is important that we hear that again now.”

Robinson, the founder of the far-right English Defence League, has been jailed in the past for contempt of court after being sued for libel by a Syrian refugee, as well as for jeopardizing a trial in 2019. He is currently facing trial for harassing journalists.

Last month, he organized a rally in central London that drew as many as 150,000 attendees and prompted more than 150 reports of anti-Muslim hate to the charity Tell Mama.


Eight arrested, 20 police hurt in clashes at Spanish Palestine march

Eight arrested, 20 police hurt in clashes at Spanish Palestine march
Updated 05 October 2025

Eight arrested, 20 police hurt in clashes at Spanish Palestine march

Eight arrested, 20 police hurt in clashes at Spanish Palestine march
  • Spanish demonstrations joined those in Rome and Lisbon amid anger after the Israeli interception of the Global Sumud aid flotilla
  • Out of the 49 Spaniards who were detained by Israeli forces on the aid flotilla, 21 will fly back to Spain from Tel Aviv on Sunday

MADRID: Eight people were arrested and 20 police officers injured in clashes between pro-Palestinian protesters and police in Barcelona, police said on Sunday.
Demonstrators vandalized shops, which they claimed had links to Israel, during a mainly peaceful march of 70,000 protesters on Saturday, police said.
Tens of thousands took part in protests in Madrid and scores of other Spanish cities as well as demonstrations in Rome and Lisbon amid anger after the Israeli interception of the Global Sumud aid flotilla that had set sail from Barcelona, trying to break the blockade of the Palestinian territory.
Out of the 49 Spaniards who were detained by Israeli forces on the aid flotilla, 21 will fly back to Spain from Tel Aviv on Sunday, the Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares told Spanish television RTVE.
Spain, which recognized a Palestinian state in May 2024 and has been a vocal critic of Israel’s actions in Gaza, last month banned ships and aircraft delivering weapons or military-grade jet fuel to Israel.


UK govt to give police new powers to crack down on protests

UK govt to give police new powers to crack down on protests
Updated 05 October 2025

UK govt to give police new powers to crack down on protests

UK govt to give police new powers to crack down on protests
  • Move comes after nearly 500 people detained in London for supporting Palestine Action
  • Home secretary: ‘The frequency of particular protests in particular places is in and of itself a reason for the police to be able to restrict and place conditions’

LONDON: Police in the UK will receive new powers to crack down on protests.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is set to reassess all existing anti-protest laws, including giving police the ability to relocate regular demonstrations and ban protests outright based on the “cumulative impact” of “repeated disorder” at marches and rallies. 

It comes after around 500 people were arrested in central London for taking part in a demonstration in support of banned group Palestine Action. 
Mahmood told Sky News that she believes there is “a gap in the law” that requires immediate correction.

“What I will be making explicit is that cumulative disruption, that is to say the frequency of particular protests in particular places, is in and of itself a reason for the police to be able to restrict and place conditions,” she said.

Mass events in support of the Palestinian cause have become a regular feature of weekends in London since the Gaza war began in October 2023.

A new element, though, is demonstrations in support of Palestine Action, which was banned as a terrorist group after a series of incidents, including a break-in at a Royal Air Force base earlier this year.

There had been calls for people not to march in support of the people of Gaza or Palestine Action this weekend following the deaths of two people in a terrorist attack on a synagogue in Manchester earlier in the week, including from Prime Minister Keir Starmer. 

In response, Defend Our Juries, which organized Saturday’s protest, said in a statement that it is up to the authorities to “choose to prioritise protecting the public from real terrorism, and not waste resources on enforcing the absurd and ridiculous ban on Palestine Action.”


Landslides kill at least 20 people in India’s Darjeeling

Landslides kill at least 20 people in India’s Darjeeling
Updated 05 October 2025

Landslides kill at least 20 people in India’s Darjeeling

Landslides kill at least 20 people in India’s Darjeeling
  • Floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains have killed at least 20 people in Darjeeling in northern India, a lawmaker from the region said Sunday

KOLKATA: Floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains have killed at least 20 people in Darjeeling in northern India, a lawmaker from the region said Sunday.
“In the wake of last night’s heavy cyclone in the Darjeeling hills, over 20 people have lost their lives,” said Harsh Vardhan Shringla, a lawmaker in India’s upper house.
“Areas across the hills have been cut off and roads destroyed.”


Two killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine’s Lviv region, governor says

Two killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine’s Lviv region, governor says
Updated 05 October 2025

Two killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine’s Lviv region, governor says

Two killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine’s Lviv region, governor says
  • Two killed in Russian air attack on Ukraine’s Lviv region, governor says

KYIV: A Russian drone and missile strike on Ukraine’s western Lviv region overnight killed two people, the region’s governor said on Sunday.
Writing on the Telegram messaging app, Maksym Kozytskyi added that two other people had been wounded.