Connect with us

BBC News World

Katya Adler: Europe’s Nato allies push back at reported US threat to Spain

​  ​

Katya Adler: Europe’s Nato allies push back at reported US threat to Spain

Katya AdlerEurope editor
Reuters European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks to Croatia's Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic at the Cyprus summitReuters

It’s become a joke – through gritted teeth – these days in EU circles, that whenever leaders meet, as they did these last two days in Cyprus – expecting to discuss practicalities, such as the new EU budget – they get railroaded by yet another crisis.

There is the ongoing energy crisis provoked by the US-Israel war on Iran, Russia’s aggression in neighbouring Ukraine, now in its fourth year. And this Friday morning, souring relations between Europe and the United States, along with a potentially devastating defence impact, reared its Medusa-like head. Again.

“No worries,” Spain’s determined-to-appear-calm prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, said to waiting journalists as he arrived at the leaders’ summit. “We are fulfilling our obligations toward Nato.”

What did he feel compelled to say he wasn’t fretting about?

An email, originating from the US Pentagon and first reported by Reuters on Friday had leaked, suggesting measures for the US to punish allies it believed had failed to support the US-Israel campaign against Iran. The email said the US could seek to suspend Spain from Nato over its stance.

There is actually no provision in the Nato treaties to expel a member country. And any action to bar Spain from filling key civilian or military roles in Nato, also alluded to in the email as possible punitive action, would have to be taken unanimously amongst all Nato members .

Fellow EU leaders at the Cyprus summit, who are also in Nato, lept to Spain’s defence. Dutch prime minister Rob Jetten said he wanted to be “crystal clear” that Spain was and would remain a full Nato member. He said European countries were currently “doing a great deal to strengthen Nato”. That, he said, was also in America’s interest.

A high-ranking German official said “Spain is a member of Nato. And I see no reason why that should change.”

Byron Smith via Getty Images Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni speaking at the Cyprus summitByron Smith via Getty Images

While Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni – who was once seen as so close to Donald Trump as to be viewed as a “Trump whisperer” or go-between between Europe and an increasingly irritated, or seemingly irritable, US – criticised the tensions between Washington and Madrid as “not at all positive”.

Growing public opinion in Italy as across Europe has turned against Donald Trump. Meloni feels forced to take a stance against her erstwhile best buddy, drawing his ire at Rome too.

The Italian prime minister has denied the US permission to use the Sigonella airbase in Sicily for military operations against Iran. As the head of government of a country that considers itself culturally Catholic, she also described Donald Trump’s recent derogatory remarks about the Pope as “unacceptable”. President Trump, who previously considered Meloni “one of the real leaders of the world,” lashed out and told an Italian newspaper that “She’s the one who’s unacceptable” and “no longer the same person.”

The leaked Pentagon email also suggested a possible potshot at former “special ally”, and fellow Nato member, the United Kingdom – reviewing the US position on the UK’s claim to the Falkland Islands in the south Atlantic, which are also claimed by Argentina.

Why?

Donald Trump has remained furious with British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer ever since he initially denied a request to use British military bases ahead of launching attacks on Iran in February. The UK has now allowed the US to use bases to launch strikes on Iranian sites targeting the effectively blocked Strait of Hormuz. RAF planes have also taken part in missions to shoot down Iranian drones.

But Starmer insists that greater involvement in the war and the current US blockade of Iran’s ports are not in the UK’s interest. Trump has repeatedly lashed out at him verbally as a result.

When it comes to Spain, though, Trump appears particularly incandescent.

Prime Minister Sanchez was outspoken in his opposition to the US-Israeli strikes on Iran from the get-go, describing them as illegal under international law. He immediately denied US forces permission to use joint US-Spanish military bases in Spain for operations against Iran. This led to threats (not as yet enacted upon) of trade sanctions from Trump. The Spanish prime minister had previously already grievously irritated Washington by being the only member of Nato to refuse the US president’s demand to boost defence spending by 5% of GDP.

Spain has been dismissive of the leaked Pentagon email. Prime Minister Sanchez commented that “We do not work based on emails. We work with official documents and official positions taken, in this case, by the government of the United States.”

The mail betrays a “fundamental misunderstanding” in the Trump administration about what Nato does and what Nato is, says Camille Grande, the former Nato Assistant Secretary General for Defence Investment and current Secretary General of ASD Europe (Aerospace, Security, and Defence Industries Association for Europe).

“Are Europeans sufficiently aligned with the US, according to Trump’s tastes?” That is the wrong question for Washington to be asking, according to Grande. The defence alliance is based on consensus; not run by the United States.

Grande compares Trump to a landlord seeking to expel tenants from his building if they don’t pay sufficient rent in his opinion. But Nato is not Trump’s building, he emphasises.

Getty Images French President Emmanuel Macron greets Syrian President Ahmed al-SharaaGetty Images

Even more damningly, President Emmanuel Macron of France has accused Trump of “hollowing out” Nato by repeatedly undermining the alliance in public.

Trump likes to call Nato a “paper tiger”. He’s threatened to leave the defence alliance on a number of occasions, recently posting on social media that he had always considered Nato to be a “one-way street”.

“We will protect them, but they will do nothing for us,” he has written.

These public displays of disunity are corrosive and potentially deeply damaging in defence terms for Europe.

Countries in the east of the continent feel threatened by an expansionist Russia. Its war economy is being buoyed by cash Moscow is hoovering up as a result of being able to export oil at a high price worldwide now, thanks to the energy crisis provoked by Iran’s effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz – and the US counter-blockade.

Traditionally an arch trans-Atlanticist, Prime Minister Donald Tusk of Poland openly questioned this week whether the US would actually come to its allies’ aid militarily in case of an attack, as envisaged in Article 5 of Nato’s founding treaty.

Nato reckons Russia would be ready to attack a Nato nation in three years’ time. The Dutch military intelligence service MIVD noted this week that in its assessment, after the war against Ukraine ends, Moscow would be ready to initiate a regional conflict against Nato within the year.

“The Russian objective of such a conflict would not be to defeat Nato militarily, but to politically divide Nato through limited territorial gains. If necessary, under the threat of nuclear armament,” said MIVD in its annual report.

Tiny, high defence-spending EU and Nato member Estonia, which neighbours and fears Russia, experienced a slap in the face by the US this week regarding defence capabilities. Because of its own needs in the war with Iran, the Pentagon told Estonia it would have to delay delivery of six units of a high-tech weapons system (the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) that Estonia had contracted to buy from the US government.

The US Embassy in Tallinn had called the purchase “one of the most significant capability upgrades in Estonian military history.” Estonia is now left feeling exposed. This despite Estonia, along with its neighbouring Baltic States ostensibly being in President Trump’s “good books”.

Late last year, US defence secretary Pete Hegseth seemed to suggest the Trump administration was essentially dividing up its allies into “good guys” and “bad guys”.

In his address to the Reagan National Defense Forum on 6 December, Hegseth said:

“Model allies that step up like Israel, South Korea, Poland, increasingly Germany, the Baltics and others will receive our special favour. Allies that do not, allies that still fail to do their part for collective defence will face consequences.”

“The President is obviously upset by Europeans that failed to fully support the US war in Iran. But punitive measures like removing force posture in Spain seem over-reactive in light of the fact that allies were never asked to assist the US and Trump has frequently denied that the US actually needed European support,” former US ambassador to Nato and President of Clarion Strategies Julianne Smith told me.

“Furthermore, in a moment when the transatlantic relationship is still reeling from a stated US policy to “get” Greenland (a territory belonging to Nato ally, Denmark), pursuing these types of punitive measures could very well issue another devastating blow to the relationship and cast a long, dark shadow over the upcoming Nato summit in July.”

At the EU summit in Cyprus this week, leaders were sufficiently spooked as to want to explore a once little-known clause of the EU treaty – the mutual defence article 42.7. Could it be used if Nato’s Article 5 proved to be redundant, at least as long as Trump is president, some leaders wondered?

Unfortunately for them, the head of the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, that is regarded as the guardian of the treaties, said she was flummoxed.

“The treaty is very clear about the what,” said Ursula von der Leyen, explaining that EU member countries are obliged to come to each other’s aid under article 42.7. But “The treaty is not clear about what happens when, and who does what,” she added, rather unhelpfully.

Stuck between public opinion hostile to the Trump administration, and the economic and defence capability necessities of trying to keep Washington onside as much as possible, many of Europe’s Nato (and EU) nations, led by France and the UK, are preparing along with other nations, an international maritime patrol and mine-sweeping capabilities for the Strait of Hormuz after hostilities have ended. In the hope, amongst other things, of somewhat placating Trump.

The US is not part of the maritime discussions – as France has indicated it would prefer, though the UK is reported to think otherwise.

Reacting to a comment, by the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, that the war on Iran was not Nato’s war, the Trump administration responded that it had been involved in trying to resolve the war in Ukraine (though that was not Washington’s war).

Former Nato Secretary Jens Stoltenberg warned this week in a number of media interviews, that bearing all these tensions in mind, Nato’s continued existence was not guaranteed ten years from now.

But the alliance’s survival is in the US interest, he insists. In contrast to other global powers, like China, the US has allies and therefore global military and economic structures it can (normally) depend on.

“The United States is 25% of the global economy. But together with Nato allies, we are 50% of the global economy and 50% of the world’s military might. So it makes the United States safer to have friends and allies – something that Russia and China don’t have at all,” according to Stoltenberg

The former head of Nato has pushed back on the idea that Europe has broadly abandoned the United States over Iran, arguing most allies have still provided logistical support behind the scenes.

“There are some exceptions, but most have contributed.”

Referring back to Trump’s description of Nato as a paper tiger, Stoltenberg says such alliances become far less useful once set on fire by their own critics.

Europe’s Nato members have said over and again in recent weeks that theirs is a defence alliance, not designed (or requested by Trump) to formally endorse offensive action over Iran. The US-Israel attacks are viewed in Europe as a war of choice.

The disagreement between European powers and the US is not over whether Tehran poses a threat but rather how to deal with that threat.

Governments in Europe favour diplomacy and sanctions, not unilateral military action.

  

Continue Reading

BBC News World

Nato says ‘no provision’ to expel members after report US could seek to suspend Spain

​  ​

Nato says ‘no provision’ to expel members after report US could seek to suspend Spain

Amy Walker
Getty Images Pedro Sanchez gesturing with handsand short greying brown hair, wears a suit and tie as he speaks during a press conferenceGetty Images

Nato says there is no provision for member states to be suspended or expelled from the military alliance after a report said the US could seek to suspend Spain over its Iran war stance.

Reuters quoted a US official who said an internal Pentagon email had suggested measures for the US to punish allies it believed had failed to support its campaign.

The email also suggested reviewing the US position on the UK’s claim to the Falklands islands in the south Atlantic, which are also claimed by Argentina.

A Nato official told the BBC that the alliance’s founding treaty “does not foresee any provision for suspension of Nato membership, or expulsion”.

Spain’s leader has also dismissed the report.

Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson told the BBC that despite “everything” the US has done for its Nato allies, “they were not there for us”.

She added: “The War Department [defence department] will ensure that the president has credible options to ensure that our allies are no longer a paper tiger and instead do their part.

“We have no further comment on any internal deliberations to that effect.”

The BBC has contacted the UK government for comment.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticised Nato allies for their reluctance to play a greater role after the US and Israel attacked Iran on 28 February and Iran subsequently restricted shipping through the key Strait of Hormuz route.

Spain has refused to allow the use of air bases on its territory for attacks on Iran. The US has two military bases in Spain, Naval Station Rota and Morón Air Base.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told reporters: “We do not work based on emails. We work with official documents and official positions taken, in this case, by the government of the United States.”

Sánchez added that Spain supported “full co-operation with its allies, but always within the framework of international law.”

Meanwhile, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has insisted that greater involvement in the war or the current US blockade of Iran’s ports is not in the UK’s interest.

The UK has allowed the US to use British bases to launch strikes on Iranian sites targeting the Strait of Hormuz and RAF planes have taken part in missions to shoot down Iranian drones.

The UK, France and others have said they would be willing to keep the Strait of Hormuz – a global oil shipping route – open after a lasting ceasefire or the end of the war.

On Friday, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth used a news conference to again take aim at European allies for not helping Washington in its war against Iran.

“We are not counting on Europe, but they need the Strait of Hormuz much more than we do, and might want to start doing less talking and having less fancy conferences in Europe and getting a boat. This is much more their fight than ours,” Hegseth said.

“Europe and Asia have benefitted from our protection for decades, but the time for free riding is over,” he added.

Last month Trump said he had always considered the 32-member Nato defence alliance to be a “one-way street”. “We will protect them, but they will do nothing for us,” he wrote.

The internal Pentagon email said access, basing and overflight rights (ABO) were “just the absolute baseline for Nato”, the unnamed US official told Reuters.

As possible retaliation for this perceived lack of co-operation, the email suggested reassessing American diplomatic support for longstanding European “imperial possessions” such as the Falkland Islands, Reuters quoted the US official as saying.

On Friday, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni urged Nato allies to stick together in the wake of the Pentagon memo, saying the alliance is a “source of strength”.

“We must work to strengthen Nato’s European pillar… which must clearly complement the American one,” she told reporters at an EU summit in Cyprus.

A German government spokesperson said Spain’s membership was not in question.

“Spain is a member of Nato. And I see no reason why that should change,” the spokesperson said during a regular news conference in Berlin.

The Falklands, known in Argentina as the Malvinas, are about 8,000 miles (12,875km) from the UK and about 300 miles from mainland Argentina.

Argentina has long claimed sovereignty over the islands, a British overseas territory in the south-west Atlantic Ocean. The two countries fought a war over the issue, after Argentine forces invaded the islands in 1982.

Another option in the email outlined suspending “difficult” countries from important positions within the alliance, according to the official.

The official told Reuters that the memo did not suggest that the US could withdraw from the alliance, nor did it propose closing bases in Europe.

  

Continue Reading

BBC News World

Key suspect in notorious Tadamon massacre during Syria civil war arrested

​  ​

Key suspect in Tadamon massacre during Syria Civil War arrested16 minutes agoRaffi BergReutersA Syrian interior minister said that a key suspect in one the most notorious killings in the Syrian civil conflict has been arrested. Amjad Youssef had been wanted for the mass killings of civilians which occurred in April 2013 in Tadamon, a district in Damascus. In 2022, footage emerged showing Syrian soldiers leading victims bound and blindfolded to a pit, before shooting them. The video was one of the most direct visual evidences of extrajudicial killings committed by the then government forces.

  

Continue Reading

BBC News World

Kenyan leader sparks uproar after mocking Nigerians’ spoken English

​  ​

Kenyan leader sparks uproar after mocking Nigerians’ spoken English2 hours agoWycliffe MuiaNairobiReutersKenyan President William Ruto has faced a social media backlash after publicly suggesting that Nigerian-accented English was incomprehensible and required a translator. Ruto told Kenyans in Italy that if you listen to Nigerians speak, you won’t understand what they are saying. You need a translator His remarks were harshly condemned by Nigerians and Africans online, who accused him of demeaning another African nation. Hopewell Chin’ono wrote that “English is not a measure for intelligence, capability or national progress, but a colonial-era language.” Both Kenya and Nigeria, as former British colonies, share English as their official language. However, each country has developed its own spoken varieties, with different phonetic structure. “Our education is excellent. Our English is good. We speak some of best English in the World. Listening to a Nigerian, you won’t understand what they are saying. “You need a translator, even when they speak English,” he said. The room laughed. “We have the best human resources anywhere in the globe. Ruto said that we just need to improve it through more training. Many users have condemned the Kenyan leader’s remarks for displaying a “deep inferiority complicated rooted in colonial conditioning”. Shehu Sani, a former Nigerian senator, posted on X that Ruto was mocking the English of his country by a Nobel Prize for The exchanges usually revolve around pop culture, sport, and economic comparisons. More recently, they have also included political remarks. While Ruto didn’t make There has been no official response from Ruto’s government, but some Kenyans have defended him online, arguing that critics have misunderstood the intent of his remarks and missed the humour.You may also be interested in: Women secretly filmed, then ridiculed and abused online’They told me he was dead’: Children born near army base learn truth about UK soldier dadsRationing power and diluting petrol – how African countries are coping with effects of Iran warOne ant for $220: The new frontier of wildlife traffickingGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsFocus on AfricaThis Is AfricaKenyaNigeriaAfrica

  

Continue Reading

BBC News World

Epstein housed abuse victims in London flats, BBC reveals

​  ​

Epstein housed abuse victims in London flats, BBC reveals5 hours agoChi Chi Izundu,investigations correspondent,Olivia Davies,Will DahlgreenandAdam WalkerGetty Images/BBCSex-criminal financier Jeffrey Epstein housed women who say he abused them in several London flats in the years after UK police decided not to investigate him, the BBC can reveal.We found evidence of four flats, rented in the affluent borough of Kensington and Chelsea, in receipts, emails and bank records contained within the Epstein files. The Mount It The Adam ” Who He “Epstein’s dead. But Who ” He The She The In The Email In another message, Epstein swore at the woman, called her “rude” and said she had “disgusting behaviour”, telling her she was a “brat who has yet to accept responsibility”.Other women living in the flats were coerced to “work” for him to build his sex-trafficking scheme by recruiting other women, we found.One sent Epstein pictures of “cute” models she had just met in London. Ep Traffic The In Official Last She We We Answer After The The Virginia The NCA said that it does not routinely make comments on “the sharing of information with international partners”. A Met Police spokesperson confirmed that it is “fully engaged” in the National Police Chiefs’ Council, which was formed following the release the Epstein files. “Where the allegations span over many years and involve public officials and institutions, the state may also need to address wider questions, such as how this went undetected for so much time.” she said.In January, the BBC also reported that another woman was alleging that she had been sent to the UK by Epstein for sex with Mountbatten-Windsor.After the Epstein files were released in January, several police forces across the UK, including the Met, confirmed they were either making enquiries or assessing information before deciding whether to open an investigation.But Hyland, the former anti-slavery commissioner, said: “I don’t know what that is. You either investigate it or you don’t. “He said with the complaint of trafficking and the details of London properties there was “more than enough to start an investigation”.If you have information about this story that you would like to share, please email epsteininvestigation@bbc.co.ukVirginia GiuffreJeffrey EpsteinSex trafficking

  

Continue Reading

BBC News World

Two trains collide head-on in Denmark, leaving five critically hurt

​  ​

Two trains collide in Denmark, with four people being critically injured. Egetved is the mayor of Gribskov and said that those with critical injuries were flown to the National Hospital, Copenhagen. She wrote on Facebook that the local track was used by many Gribskov workers, students and residents. Rail accidents are rare in Denmark. One expert suggested that the train driver had overridden a stop sign as the train left the local station. The Gribskov Line is not believed to have an automated safety system. Trine Egetved, a public broadcaster DR, said that it was shocking that the two trains could collide.

  

Continue Reading

Latest News

UsaLocalNews51 minutes ago

Father recalls horror after son murdered his 5 grandchildren: ‘I knew he killed them’

​ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! When Timothy Jones Sr. learned his grandchildren were missing, a deep,...

Video1 hour ago

Seven dead in major Russian attack on Ukraine | BBC News

At least seven people were killed in Russian strikes across Ukraine overnight, including five in the central city of Dnipro,...

UsaLocalNews2 hours ago

New York bills could abolish life without parole for serial killers and cop killers, critics warn

​ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! State lawmakers in New York are considering a series of “four...

Video2 hours ago

Pope condemns death penalty as Trump admin pushes for firing squads

Pope Leo XIV condemned capital punishment in a video to DePaul University in Illinois on Friday to mark the 15th...

Video2 hours ago

Owner's warning after dog's tulip festival death. #Yorkshire #BBCNews

UsaLocalNews2 hours ago

CBP joins forces with Coast Guard to intercept 3 smuggling boats, apprehend 60 people off California coast

​ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it apprehended 60 smugglers off...

Video3 hours ago

How do you write a new James Bond theme? | BBC News

The composer behind many James Bond films, David Arnold, has written a new 007 theme. But this time, it’s for...

UsaLocalNews3 hours ago

Masked burglary crews terrorizing ritzy neighborhoods show ‘they’re doing their homework,’ veteran cop warns

​ NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A fast-moving burglary spree is unfolding across Los Angeles, with thieves...

Video3 hours ago

Retired generals break down Iran war strategy after week 8

A flurry of developments across the Middle East is intensifying an already volatile regional landscape, with diplomacy, military …

Video4 hours ago

Matt Friend pokes fun at Gen Z in the military

Comedian Matt Friend poked fun at himself and the rest of Gen Z enlisting in the US military. ‘America Laughs...

Trending News

Join Our Newsletter

Stay updated with breaking news and exclusive content.