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Trump and NATOin World Affairs
3 hours ago

NATO boosts defense spending amid Trump's pressure, reaffirming US commitment to European security while reigniting debates over mutual defense pledges.

Trump says U.S. will meet with Iran 'next week'

NBC NewsWednesday, June 25, 2025 at 2:46:48 PM
Trump says U.S. will meet with Iran 'next week'
President Trump announced that the U.S. plans to meet with Iran "next week" to discuss nuclear negotiations, following recent tensions between Iran and Israel. Surprisingly, he downplayed the urgency of a deal, claiming the U.S. had already "destroyed the nuclear" (likely referring to past sanctions or sabotage efforts).
Editor’s Note: This is a head-scratcher. On one hand, talks could ease tensions, but Trump’s casual dismissal of a nuclear deal raises questions—is this a genuine diplomatic push or just posturing? Either way, it’s a high-stakes moment for Middle East stability.
— Curated via WP Now’s

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How ‘Daddy’ Trump Learned to Love NATO
neutralWorld Affairs
After years of publicly criticizing NATO and threatening to pull back U.S. support, Trump seems to have struck a deal with European allies during his first NATO summit of his second term. The unspoken agreement? If European members step up their defense spending, the U.S. will stick around as NATO’s backbone. It’s a shift from his earlier combative tone—more transactional than ideological, but it keeps the alliance intact for now.
Editor’s Note: NATO’s survival has been a recurring question mark under Trump, so this détente matters. It suggests Europe is willing to meet his demands (at least halfway) to avoid a total U.S. withdrawal—a scenario that would’ve left the alliance weaker and global security more unstable. But it also means NATO’s future hinges on budgets, not just shared values.
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