Trump Trots Out Wildly Contradictory Iran War Claims — And Says He Doesn’t Care If There’s A Peace Deal


WASHINGTON – America’s Nato allies need to help open the Strait of Hormuz, but it doesn’t matter if they don’t. The war against Iran is already “won,” but thousands of ground troops are on the way there. If there is a peace deal soon, that’s great, but if there isn’t, that’s great, too.

Nearing a month into his war against Iran, President Donald Trump continues verbally attacking US allies while enriching the purported enemy with billions of dollars in sanctions relief while offering no concrete plan to end the conflict.

“They are begging to make a deal, not me. They are begging to make a deal and anybody that saw what was happening over there would understand why they want to make a deal,” Trump said on Thursday, adding later: “The reason they want to make a deal is they have been just beat to shit.”

During an hour of monologue and a half-hour question-and-answer session with reporters ahead of a Cabinet meeting, Trump yet again offered wildly contradictory claims about a war that has killed 13 US service members, seriously injured hundreds more, left thousands of Iranians dead and has brought spiking gasoline prices and a new round of inflation at home.

As is typically the case with Trump, who is both a prolific liar as well as profoundly ignorant, it was impossible to know how much of what he said about the war was true, how much he believed was true but in reality was not, how much was a deliberate lie and how much reflected an irritation.

Trump was openly peeved, for example, by a Wall Street Journal report published on Wednesday stating that he was eager to wrap up the war and move on.

“I read a story today that I’m desperate to make a deal…. I’m the opposite of desperate. I don’t care. I want to know ― in fact, we have other targets we want to hit before we leave. We’re hitting them on a daily basis,” he said.

Trump stated that the war was over — “We already won” — but then also said that he was still considering seizing Iranian oil and may or may not use the military to confiscate uranium in Iran’s possession.

Deploying troops would almost certainly lead to the death of more Americans, as they would become far easier targets than US planes and ships have been since the war began on February 28. Robert Kagan, a veteran of the Reagan-era State Department and now an analyst at the Brookings Institution, fears that Trump is likely to use the thousands of Marines currently on their way there.

“He definitely is going to use ground troops. They wouldn’t be sending them if they didn’t plan to use them,” Kagan said. “Right now, he’s trying to buy time. Keep markets and oil prices calm. Keep his voters calm. While quietly telling Republicans to get ready to support ground troops. Which they will.”

Trump again complained that Nato allies were not helping him attack Iran and said, falsely, that Nato members have never helped the United States.

“I said 25 years ago that Nato is a paper tiger, but more importantly, that we’ll come to their rescue, but they will never come to ours,” he said.

In reality, the only time the alliance’s mutual defence clause was invoked was after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Trump appears not to understand that the alliance is a defensive one and does not require signatories to assist a member that chooses to launch a war of aggression, as he has.

And Trump continued to claim that whether the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil normally passes, is open to ship traffic does not matter for Americans because the US is a net exporter of oil. “We don’t need the Hormuz Strait. We don’t need it. We don’t need it at all. We don’t ― we have so much oil. Our country is not affected by this,” he said, falsely.

In fact, though, oil is traded on a global market. A reduction in supply anywhere leads to higher costs everywhere, as Americans have already seen with gasoline prices more than $1 a gallon higher than before the war started.

Hours later, Trump wrote in a social media post that he was again postponing his threatened attack on Iran’s energy infrastructure, which, if carried out, would likely constitute a war crime.

“As per Iranian Government request, please let this statement serve to represent that I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time. Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News Media, and others, they are going very well. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP,” he said, again citing so-far nonexistent peace negotiations.

Whether and when a peace agreement will end the war and allow US service members in the region to come home appears as unclear now as it was when Trump’s attacks started. Trump’s “special envoy” to Iran, his friend and fellow real estate developer Steve Witkoff, on Thursday confirmed that he had presented a 15-point peace plan to Pakistani intermediaries — a plan that Iran quickly dismissed as unserious.

“I don’t think a deal is coming,” said John Bolton, one of Trump’s first-term national security advisers and a longtime proponent of military intervention in Iran who has nonetheless criticised Trump for lacking a coherent plan. “Not clear if there will even be a meeting.”

And in the absence of a quick negotiated end to the war, said one former national security council staffer who spoke on condition of anonymity, there are likely only two options.

“Trump either folds and tries to declare victory, basically another ‘total obliteration,’ or he escalates,” the staffer said. “The latter is ripe with danger for our forces, and the former may not work if Iran isn’t ready to pull back from the fight.”




‘Churchill would have sacked the lot of them’: Donald Trump brutally mocks Royal Navy’s ‘toy aircraft carriers’ as Britain is forced to beg Germans for warship


The Royal Navy has been forced to borrow a German frigate after ‘running out of ships’ – as Donald Trump mocked Britain’s aircraft carriers as ‘toys’.

The destroyer HMS Dragon had been due to lead a Nato mission in the North Atlantic before it was redeployed to Cyprus earlier this month in the wake of the Iran conflict.

The Navy will now lead the Nato deployment using the German frigate FGS Sachsen.

The move came as the US President yesterday took another swipe at Britain’s military, saying UK aircraft carriers ‘aren’t the best’, adding: ‘They’re toys compared to what we have.’

Last night, former top brass branded the Government a ‘bloody disgrace’ while a World War Two Royal Marine veteran raged: ‘Winston Churchill would have sacked the lot of them.’

The criticism comes just weeks after the UK was bailed out by France, Greece and Italy when an Iranian drone hit RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus and not a single British ship was in position to defend it.

It took nearly a month for HMS Dragon to reach the Mediterranean island, igniting calls from Cypriots to remove British bases from their country. 

Now the farce has deepened with the deployment exposing how short the UK’s defensive capabilities are.

‘Churchill would have sacked the lot of them’: Donald Trump brutally mocks Royal Navy’s ‘toy aircraft carriers’ as Britain is forced to beg Germans for warship

The Royal Navy has been forced to borrow a German frigate after ‘running out of ships’ – as Donald Trump (pictured on February 28) mocked Britain’s aircraft carriers as ‘toys’

The destroyer HMS Dragon (pictured in March) was due to lead a Nato mission in the North Atlantic before it was redeployed to Cyprus earlier this month in the wake of the Iran conflict

The destroyer HMS Dragon (pictured in March) was due to lead a Nato mission in the North Atlantic before it was redeployed to Cyprus earlier this month in the wake of the Iran conflict

As experts called on Labour to get a grip, Defence Secretary John Healey said he was ‘not happy with the situation’ as it ‘takes six years to build a warship’.

Yet despite repeated promises to boost defence spending, it also emerged yesterday that Nato has revised down UK defence spending in its annual report.

General Secretary Mark Rutte published figures that show the UK spent 2.31 per cent of GDP on defence last year, down from a predicted 2.4 per cent.

The report also revised down Britain’s spend for 2024 from an estimated 2.33 per cent of GDP to a final figure of 2.28 per cent.

UK military sources insist there has been no reduction and the drop is caused by changes to GDP, with other nations experiencing similar revisions.

But with anger mounting, former Nato commander General Sir Richard Shirreff told the Daily Mail the latest fiasco with FGS Sachsen ‘sends a bloody awful message’. 

He said: ‘It’s deeply embarrassing and it undermines the sense of what we should be doing as a nation. The Government needs to make sacrifices. We can’t go on ploughing money willy-nilly into welfare. 

‘Labour backbenchers have got to put up and shut up – and Keir Starmer needs to get a grip of his party.’

Royal Marine veteran Doug Cheshire, 102, who served on two battleships and an aircraft carrier in the Second World War, told the Daily Mail: ‘I think it’s a damn disgrace. They ought to be hauled over the coals for it. If Churchill was alive he would sack every one of them. He would be up in the air about the state of the Navy.

‘I’m angry. I’m very upset. After what we went through, for them to get us into this parlous state, to borrow from the Germans to do a job which we should be able to do – they need pinning against the wall for this.’

The German Embassy revealed this week that its frigate will ‘take over from HMS Dragon’ dressing it up as ‘an expression of the close Germany-British relationship’.

British sailors will use the ship to ‘fulfil its leadership role’, the Ministry of Defence confirmed. 

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It insisted that it is not uncommon for a Nato group to be commanded from an allied warship and led by Royal Navy battle staff.

But Tory MP and former Army officer Ben Obese-Jecty said it demonstrates the UK has ‘seemingly run out of ships’ and ‘Britannia no longer rules the waves’.

Former First Sea Lord, Admiral Lord West, told the Daily Mail our Nato allies ‘are noticing that we are not the power we once were’.

He said: ‘The Royal Navy was the second most powerful navy in Nato and the most powerful European navy. 

‘You can’t really say that any more. Our American allies already are looking at us and saying, ‘Oh dear, this isn’t the British we’re used to’.’

The Defence Secretary was wheeled onto the airwaves yesterday to defend the latest fiasco. 

Mr Healey told LBC’s Nick Ferrari: ‘The Germans have stepped in to supply their warship… that’s a sign of the strength of the Nato alliance.

‘But I’m not happy with the situation we have with British warships and that’s because it takes six years to build a warship.’ 

But Mr Healey stumbled over his figures when asked how many frigates are at his disposal, wrongly stating: ‘We have 17 frigates and destroyers. It’s down from 23 at the end of the last Labour government.’

In fact, that figure is 13.

An MoD spokesman said: ‘The UK is one of the top defence spenders of all Nato nations and, as these figures show, our spending has increased by almost £9billion since 2023 – a significant real terms increase.

‘We are a leader in the alliance, committing our nuclear deterrent in full to Nato and offering almost all our Armed Forces to Nato on land, in the air and at sea. 

‘We are delivering the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War and investing £270billion in defence across this Parliament alone.’


‘Mother of all U-turns’: Kemi condemns Starmer for telling US they can now fly attack missions from British airfields as Trump calls Nato a ‘paper tiger’ without America


Keir Starmer gave the go-ahead tonight for the US to use British bases to strike Iranian targets blocking the Strait of Hormuz in what Kemi Badenoch called ‘the mother of all U-turns’.

The Prime Minister deepened UK involvement in the war hours after Donald Trump branded Nato allies as ‘cowards’ for not helping protect the vital shipping lane.

Following the President’s latest tirade, Downing Street said RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire and Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean could now be used by the US to reopen the Strait. 

No 10 had previously allowed American forces to use the bases for ‘defensive’ attacks on Iranian missile sites that would put British lives or interests at risk.

Tonight the Ministry of Defence also confirmed the RAF is flying ‘defensive air patrols’ over Jordan, Qatar, the UAE and Bahrain to protect Middle East allies.

Tory leader Mrs Badenoch called Sir Keir’s announcement the ‘mother of all U-turns’.

Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge added: ‘After weeks of dither and finger-pointing, the Prime Minister has again changed his mind and performed another screeching U-turn.’

MPs warned Sir Keir tonight was dragging the UK further into the war without letting Parliament have a say. 

‘Mother of all U-turns’: Kemi condemns Starmer for telling US they can now fly attack missions from British airfields as Trump calls Nato a ‘paper tiger’ without America

Keir Starmer gave the go-ahead on Friday for the US to use British bases to strike Iranian targets blocking the Strait of Hormuz

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: ‘This is a reckless act of escalation that endangers us all. No discussion. No debate. What a disgrace. How on earth can the Prime Minister still pretend we are not involved?’

A US intelligence assessment concluded Iran has the capability to keep the strait closed for up to six months, CNN reported.

The new agreement means the US can now use the UK bases in ‘defensive operations to degrade the missile sites and capabilities being used to attack ships in the Strait of Hormuz’.

A No 10 spokesman said: ‘Ministers agreed that Iran’s reckless strikes, including on Red Ensign vessels and those of our close allies and Gulf partners, risked pushing the region further into crisis and worsening the economic impact being felt in the UK and around the world.’

Downing Street said Britain will still not be directly involved in the strikes and ‘the principles behind the UK’s approach to the conflict remain the same’.

In a post on Truth Social this afternoon, Mr Trump called Nato a ‘paper tiger’ without the US. 

He vowed ‘we will REMEMBER’ how Western nations ‘didn’t want to join the fight’ and refused to help open the Strait of Hormuz.

He added: ‘Now that fight is Militarily WON, with very little danger for them, they complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay but don’t want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military manoeuvre that is the single reason for the high oil prices. 

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch called Sir Keir's announcement tonight the 'mother of all U-turns'

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch called Sir Keir’s announcement tonight the ‘mother of all U-turns’ 

‘So easy for them to do, with so little risk. COWARDS, and we will REMEMBER!’

Outside the White House, he added the UK ‘should have acted a lot faster’ in allowing America to use British bases to strike missile sites targeting the Strait.

He said: ‘I was a little surprised at the UK to be honest – they should have acted a lot faster.

‘The relationship is so good but this has never happened before. They were really pretty much our first ally… they didn’t want us to use the island (Diego Garcia) which for some reason they gave up rights to.’

His tirade came as Nato withdrew its advisory mission in Iraq, which removed ‘all its personnel’ from the Middle East.

Meanwhile, some 2,500 US Marines are set to arrive in the region in the coming days with two more such units to follow as Mr Trump is reportedly mulling a high stakes invasion of Kharg Island to force open the Strait. 

The tiny territory, twice the size of Heathrow, sits 15 miles offshore from the mainland and is strategically vital as it processes 90 per cent of Tehran’s crude oil exports.

Washington hopes that by seizing it they can force the new Supreme Leader to the negotiation table. 

Donald Trump vowed on Truth Social this afternoon that the United States 'will REMEMBER' how Western nations 'didn't want to join the fight' and refused to help open the Strait of Hormuz

Donald Trump vowed on Truth Social this afternoon that the United States ‘will REMEMBER’ how Western nations ‘didn’t want to join the fight’ and refused to help open the Strait of Hormuz

‘We need about a month to weaken the Iranians more with strikes, take the island and then get them by the balls and use it for negotiations,’ a US source told Axios news website.

However, seizing the island would not only cut off the vast majority of Iranian oil exports but could also provoke the regime to ignite a full-scale war against energy infrastructure across the Gulf and send crude prices soaring even further.

It could also risk the wrath of China which gets 13 per cent of its oil from Iran and there is no guarantee Iran would surrender.

Today, Tehran defiantly insisted that it will continue to deny its enemy their security in the Strait and will fight on. 

‘The soldiers of Islam are eagerly awaiting the American marines,’ the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said.

‘They are fully prepared to deliver a hard slap to the American warship deep in the theatre of war and to bring maritime surprises up close for the American marines to witness.’

IRGC spokesman General Ali Mohammad Naeini said: ‘These people expect the war to continue until the enemy is completely exhausted.’ 

But hours later Naeini was reportedly killed in a strike. Saudi Arabia also gave its strongest hint yet that it may retaliate against Iran if the regime continues to strike critical infrastructure across the Gulf.

Despite calls to halt strikes on energy facilities, Iranian drones hit a Kuwaiti oil refinery today. 

This came after Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu said a ‘ground component’ would be necessary to topple the Iranian regime as ‘revolutions from the air’ were not possible.

The US has not ruled out boots on the ground. 

UK military planners have joined the US Central Command to look at options for getting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.

But defence sources have stressed the situation was so dangerous, not many nations would be willing to put warships ‘in the middle of that threat right now’.

Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge said: ‘The Prime Minister had the Navy’s only active minesweeper taken out of the Gulf a week before the war began. He dithered about sending a warship to help defend our base in Cyprus.

‘And where we have been clear from the outset that we would have allowed our closest military ally to use our bases, Starmer has been all over the place.’

Other MPs warned Sir Keir was dragging the UK further into the war without giving Parliament a say. 

Veteran Labour MP Jon Trickett said: ‘It’s impossible to reconcile the Government’s stated objective to ‘de-escalate the war’ with the decision to allow US war planes to attack Iran from bases on UK territory.’

Plaid Cymru’s Liz Saville Roberts said: ‘There must be a vote in Parliament.’


Donald Trump Brands Nato Members ‘Cowards’ For Not Helping US Open Strait Of Hormuz


The US president described the military alliance as “a paper tiger” in his latest rant on Truth Social.

His comments came nearly three weeks after America and Israel started bombing Iran and amid warnings that he is “losing control” of the conflict.

The Iranian regime has effectively shut down the Strait – which carries around one-fifth of the world’s oil supply – by launching missile and drone attacks on ships trying to use it.

That has led to a spike in oil prices and sparked fears of a global economic meltdown.

Trump has previously called on countries – including the UK – to send warships to the region to deter the Iranian attacks, but they have all so far declined.

The president said: “Without the U.S.A., NATO IS A PAPER TIGER! They didn’t want to join the fight to stop a Nuclear Powered Iran. Now that fight is Militarily WON, with very little danger for them, they complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay, but don’t want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military maneuver that is the single reason for the high oil prices. So easy for them to do, with so little risk. COWARDS, and we will REMEMBER!”

Trump’s comments are at odds with his claim on Tuesday that “we don’t need any help” from Nato, which he said had abandoned the US “in its time of need”.

He said: “I wonder what would happen if we ‘finished off’ what’s left of the Iranian Terror State, and let the Countries that use it, we don’t, be responsible for the so called ‘Strait?’

“That would get some of our non-responsive ‘Allies’ in gear, and fast!!!”




Trump rages against Israel’s Netanyahu for striking Iran’s oil fields sending gas prices skyrocketing: ‘I told him don’t do that’


President Donald Trump said Thursday that he had spoken with Israeli Prime Minister and told him to stop attacking Iran’s oil fields, a move that sent fuel prices skyrocketing.

Trump was asked in the Oval Office if he had talked to Bibi after the President sent out a long-winded Truth Social post Wednesday night condemning the dramatic escalation in the Iran war. 

An Israeli strike had set ablaze the South Pars, with Iran retaliating against Gulf nations, including on the LNG plant in Qatar.

‘Yeah, I did. I did,’ Trump said, confirming a conversation with Netanyahu. ‘I told them, “don’t do that.” And he won’t do that.

‘We didn’t discuss, we do – we’re independent, we get along great, it’s coordinated, but on occasion he’ll do something and if I don’t like it – so we’re not doing that anymore,’ the President added. 

The Iran war already has Americans feeling pain at the pump, with gas prices up to $3.90 a gallon nationally, compared to the $2.90 a gallon it was costing before the strikes began on February 28. 

In his Truth Social post, Trump said the US ‘knew nothing’ about Israel’s plans to hit South Pars, though threatened to ‘massively blow up’ the whole oil field if Iran were to retaliate again. 

‘I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long-term implications that it will have on the future of Iran, but if Qatar’s LNG is again attacked, I will not hesitate to do so,’ Trump warned. 

Trump rages against Israel’s Netanyahu for striking Iran’s oil fields sending gas prices skyrocketing: ‘I told him don’t do that’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

President Donald Trump (left) told reporters Thursday that he had spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) and told him to stop attacking Iranian oil fields 

Smoke and flames rise from the South Pars gas field following an Israeli strike, as seen through the window of a moving vehicle. The strike represented a major escalation in the war and angered the US's European and Middle Eastern allies

Smoke and flames rise from the South Pars gas field following an Israeli strike, as seen through the window of a moving vehicle. The strike represented a major escalation in the war and angered the US’s European and Middle Eastern allies

Allies in both the Middle East and Europe were left furious over Israel’s move, with French President Emmanuel Macron calling the move ‘reckless.’ 

The leaders of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan and Canada also slammed Iran on Thursday for attacking ships in the Strait of Hormuz. 

‘We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait. We welcome the commitment of nations who are engaging in preparatory planning,’ the joint statement read. 

Trump has raged against NATO – of which the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Canada are members – for not immediately offering to assist in protecting commercial ships from Iranian attacks in the Strait of Hormuz – a major global shipping lane.

His Oval Office meeting on Thursday was with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a political ally, who told the President that she believed, despite the current Iranian conflict, which Trump signed off on, only he could ‘achieve peace across the world.’ 

During their sit-down, Trump praised Japan’s apparent willingness to help patrol the Strait of Hormuz.

‘We’ve had tremendous support and relationship with Japan on everything, and I believe that based on statements that were given to us yesterday, the day before yesterday, having to do with Japan, they are really stepping up to the plate.’

‘Unlike NATO,’ the President added. 

President Donald Trump (right) hosted Japanese Prime Minister Takaichi (left) in the Oval Office on Thursday where the Iran war was much discussed

President Donald Trump (right) hosted Japanese Prime Minister Takaichi (left) in the Oval Office on Thursday where the Iran war was much discussed 

He also complained of NATO: ‘They don’t want to help us defend the Strait, and they’re the ones that need it.

‘But now they’re getting much nicer, because they’re seeing my attitude,’ he continued. ‘But it’s, as far as I’m concerned, it’s too late.’ 

Trump’s February 28 decision to strike Iran has left some world leaders bewildered, as allies weren’t informed of those plans ahead of time.

In the Oval Office, a Japanese reporter asked the President why he left allies, like Japan, in the dark.  

To that, Trump gave a shocking response. 

‘You don’t want to signal too much… we wanted surprise,’ Trump answered in the Oval Office. 

‘Who knows better about surprise than Japan?’ he said. ‘Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor!’ 

The Japanese attacked the Americans on December 7, 1941, at a naval base in Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, which brought the US into World War II. 


ANDREW NEIL: A post-America Nato is taking shape. But to Starmer and Reeves’ everlasting shame, Britain is sidelined


Donald Trump is discovering the hard way that it’s usually wise to treat allies well – for if you treat them badly they’re less likely to help when you need them.

Despite several vainglorious boasts that he’s already scored a famous victory in Iran, Trump has been imploring America’s Nato allies to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, through which a substantial chunk of the world’s seaborne oil and natural gas passes – at least it did until ‘defeated’ Iran closed it.

The longer the Strait stays closed, the more the global economy will be disrupted by soaring energy prices, with the risk of widespread recession growing by the day. So there’s a whiff of desperation in Trump’s request. But the Nato allies are hardly queuing up to lend a hand – for a list of very understandable reasons as long as your arm.

President Trump wants the allies to join in a war he started without even going through the motions of consulting them about why he was doing it or what war aims he hoped to achieve.

But now that he needs them, they’re expected meekly to fall in line. Unsurprisingly, none is prepared to oblige.

Almost three weeks into the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, Trump has yet to articulate what he sees as the endgame. The allies fear getting dragged into an open-ended commitment in which Trump alone will have the power to declare victory, whenever the mood takes him.

ANDREW NEIL: A post-America Nato is taking shape. But to Starmer and Reeves’ everlasting shame, Britain is sidelined

Despite several vainglorious boasts that he’s already scored a famous victory in Iran, Donald Trump has been imploring America’s Nato allies to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz

The longer the Strait stays closed, the more the global economy will be disrupted by soaring energy prices, with the risk of widespread recession growing by the day

The longer the Strait stays closed, the more the global economy will be disrupted by soaring energy prices, with the risk of widespread recession growing by the day

Yesterday Israel hit Iran’s South Pars gas field, the biggest such facility in the world. Tehran immediately vowed retaliation against oil and gas facilities in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. The closure of the Strait may be the least of the world’s worries if both sides are now going to take out vital energy infrastructure.

The whole Iran adventure seems to have been contrived by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, and Steve Witkoff, a Trump business crony, in cahoots with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Kushner and Witkoff know much more about property development than war or geopolitics. Israel has its own agenda. No wonder the Nato allies are reluctant to get involved.

Nor does Trump’s conduct over the war to date inspire allied confidence. He began hostilities without giving much (if any) thought to how to keep the Strait open, even though it was clear that Iran would retaliate by closing it.

Washington sources tell me Trump was so convinced of US military superiority that he thought the tyrants of Tehran would topple before the regime ever got round to attacking the Gulf States or closing the Strait.

Why would the Nato allies now want to align with such epic stupidity? Especially since there still isn’t even the glimmer of a plan from Washington about how to reopen the Strait.

Trump is also paying the price for poisoning the well of allied goodwill. It’s only recently that he was disparaging and misrepresenting the role of allies who fought alongside the US in Afghanistan, their forces suffering many fatalities and life-changing injuries in brutal conditions (no ally more so than Britain). Why would they now rush to the side of someone so ungrateful and ungracious?

Moreover it was only in January that Trump and his MAGA bully-boys were musing aloud about invading a Nato ally if Denmark didn’t do as it was told and hand over Greenland to America.

Only in Trump World can you threaten allies with forcible seizure of their territory and still expect them, only a month or two later, to be loyal and supportive when you suddenly need them on the high seas.

Nor has it helped that Trump, bizarrely, sometimes treats America’s closest allies worse than its adversaries. Less than a year ago penal US tariffs were being slapped on friends from Europe to Canada to Japan while enemies like Russia were getting off scot free. Trump’s tariff obsession has been somewhat sidelined since. But allies were needlessly alienated.

For all these reasons and more there has been no allied rush to America’s side. Nor is there likely to be.

I take no comfort from writing these words. Ever since I studied American history and politics at university, worked as a White House correspondent for The Economist and bought a flat in New York where I still stay on regular visits, I have regarded myself as the epitome of the pro-American Brit.

It’s not always been a popular cause. As editor of The Sunday Times in the 1980s I was one of Ronald Reagan’s few fans in the British media. When Margaret Thatcher authorised US bombers to take off from England to launch air strikes on Libya in 1986 – a deeply unpopular decision – my newspaper was one of the few to back her.

I incurred the wrath not just of the Left but of High Tories sniffy about Reagan’s America. But I never regretted it.

So if even I can understand why the Nato allies are not now rushing to America’s side in the current conflagration, it’s fair to conclude Trump really has lost the room.

Under the dead hand of Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, both of whom know nothing and care even less about military matters, the rise in defence spending has been pathetic, argues Andrew Neil

Under the dead hand of Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, both of whom know nothing and care even less about military matters, the rise in defence spending has been pathetic, argues Andrew Neil

Poland is ahead of everybody, now spending almost 5 per cent of its GDP on defence (twice the UK rate) to create armed forces of 300,000 regulars and 200,000 reservists

Poland is ahead of everybody, now spending almost 5 per cent of its GDP on defence (twice the UK rate) to create armed forces of 300,000 regulars and 200,000 reservists

There will be a price to pay. Europe will suffer more from the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz than America, which is largely self-sufficient in oil and gas.

And Trump will seek his revenge. He has a long memory and he will not quickly forget that when he snapped his fingers the Nato allies did not come running.

It will turn out to be a significant step on the road to a post-America Nato in which the US contribution is much reduced or even, eventually, non-existent.

The European allies, as they reject US overtures to help in the Gulf, need to brace themselves for all that will follow and what it entails.

Some European powers already get it. France’s advocacy of the need for ‘strategic autonomy’ in military matters has been vindicated. Germany is in the throes of a massive military Keynsianism, with over €500billion being spent on rearming and related infrastructure investment to create by far the biggest land forces in Europe. Even peace-loving Scandinavia is rearming fast.

But Poland is ahead of everybody. It now spends almost 5 per cent of its GDP on defence (twice the UK rate) to create armed forces of 300,000 regulars and 200,000 reservists. It is buying hundreds of K2 Black Panther tanks from South Korea plus M1A2 Abrams tanks from America. Its airforce is being modernised with F-35 fighter jets, South Korean combat aircraft and the biggest fleet of Apache helicopters outside America.

Before long, the combined might of Polish and German armed forces alone might be enough to deter any westward Russian adventurism. As for Britain, we have been reduced to the role of increasingly irrelevant spectator.

For most of the past 70 years we were Nato’s biggest military spenders after America. Now we are 12th and slipping further. Under the dead hand of Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves, both of whom know nothing and care even less about military matters, the rise in defence spending has been pathetic.

They have committed to increase it to 3 per cent of GDP but refuse to publish a roadmap to show how or when we will get there.

Meanwhile we struggle to send one warship for the defence of Cyprus and have next to nothing to offer even if we wanted to help America reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump and know-nothing blowhards around him started this war without Nato allies. They can finish it on their own. If they can. Nato has bigger fish to fry.

The beginnings of a post- America Nato can be discerned. In years gone by you would have expected Britain to be in the driving seat of such a venture. Instead we have opted to be on the sidelines, irrelevant and ignored – to the everlasting shame of Starmer and Reeves.


Iranian missiles cause ‘extensive damage’ to world’s biggest natural gas plant in Qatar as Tehran furiously hits back across Gulf following US-Israeli strike on fuel facility – sending price of crude SOARING


Missiles caused ‘extensive damage’ in Qatar tonight hours after Iran threatened to wage a ‘full scale economic war’ by attacking energy facilities across the Middle East.

Video showed huge explosions in Ras Laffan – the world’s biggest natural gas plant – as well as Saudi Arabia’s capital Riyadh.

Energy sites in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar were evacuated after Tehran warned it would hit them with strikes in ‘the coming hours’.

The price of Brent crude soared this afternoon by more than five per cent to over $109. 

‘These centres have become direct and legitimate targets ‌and will be targeted in the coming hours,’ the Islamic Republic warned.

Earlier, Israel said Iran’s intelligence minister Esmail Khatib has been killed in an overnight airstrike in Tehran marking the latest assassination to hit the regime.

Israel’s defence minister Israel Katz declared Khatib had been ‘eliminated’ and promised more ‘significant surprises’ today as the Israeli military hunts down high-ranking Iranian officials.

It comes as Iranians gather for the funeral of Ali Larijani, the assassinated security chief whose death was confirmed by Tehran last night. Larijani and military commander Gholamreza Soleimani were assassinated yesterday.

Follow the latest updates on the US-Israel war with Iran

Breaking:Fire reported at Ras Laffan in Qatar – area Iran warned it would target

Iranian missiles cause ‘extensive damage’ to world’s biggest natural gas plant in Qatar as Tehran furiously hits back across Gulf following US-Israeli strike on fuel facility – sending price of crude SOARING

The Qatari government has said it is dealing with a fire in the area of Ras Laffan – home to a refinery that Iranian state media earlier said it would target and warned should be evacuated.

Qatar is one of several Gulf Arab states that had been bracing for Iran’s retaliation after Israel struck Iranian facilities in the South Pars field, the world’s largest gas field, today.

The South Pars and the adjacent North Dome fields have been shared between Iran and Qatar for years.

Qatar’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Majed Al Ansari, condemned Israel’s attack on the key economic target as being ‘reckless and irresponsible’.

QatarEnergy said:

Emergency response teams were deployed immediately to contain the resulting fires, as extensive damage has been caused.

All personnel have been accounted for and no casualties have been reported at this time

WATCH: Orange fireball lights up sky in Riyadh as missiles strike Saudi Arabian capital

Striking video shows the moment Saudi Arabia’s capital Riyadh was targeted by missiles.

A bright orange fireball lit up the sky as huge explosions rocked the city.

It comes just hours after Iran threatened to wage a ‘full scale economic war’ by attacking energy facilities across the Middle East.

Oil prices rise above $108 a barrel as missile strikes Iranian gas facility

Oil price graphic

Oil prices have surged today after Iran said the US and Israel struck one of its gas facilities.

Brent oil rose 5% to over $108 a barrel after Iran vowed to hit energy facilities throughout the Gulf in retaliation to what it said was an attack on a facility on the Gulf coast serving a massive gas field it shares with Qatar.

The three main US stock indexes all opened lower, and European stock markets reversed earlier gains.

Earlier today, oil prices fell slightly after Iraq said it had resumed limited oil exports through the Turkish port of Ceyhan, using a pipeline that avoids the effectively shut Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global oil flows.

The prices dropped despite Iran vowing revenge after Israel killed security chief Ali Larijani, a key force leading Iran since the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the first strikes of the war.

The latest flareup in violence appears to rule out any opening of the Strait of Hormuz – which in peacetime carries about a fifth of global oil and LNG trade – to shipping in the near term.

Oil prices surge as Iran threatens ‘full scale economic war’

Oil prices have soared by five percent as Iran targets oil and gas facilities across the Middle East after threatening ‘full scale economic war’.

Energy sites in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar have been evacuated after the regime said it would pummel them with strikes in ‘the coming hours’.

‘These centres have become direct and legitimate targets ‌and will be targeted in the coming hours,’ the Islamic Republic warned.

‘Therefore, all citizens, residents, and employees are ‌requested to immediately leave these ⁠areas and move to a safe distance without ⁠any delay.’

The evacuation warning came after Iranian facilities in South Pars and Asaluyeh ‌were struck by Israeli missiles.

An Iranian assault would further devastate the global economy, with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz already sparking fears of a worldwide economic crisis.

Ras Laffan fire is now under control, Qatar says

FILE PHOTO: QatarEnergy's liquefied natural gas (LNG) production facilities, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Ras Laffan Industrial City, Qatar March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

The fire in Ras Laffan has been brought under control, Qatar’s interior ministry has said.

No injuries were reported.

UAE: Air defences responding to incoming missile and drone threats

The United Arab Emirates has said its air defences are currently responding to incoming missile and drone threats from Iran.

‘Consequences beyond our control’: Iranian president issues ominous warning after gas field attack

IRAN - MARCH 01: A screen grab shows the Iranâs President Masoud Pezeshkian as he said Sunday the countryâs armed forces will continue operations against âenemy bases,❠while announcing that an interim Leadership Council has officially begun its duties following the death of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on March 01, 2026 in Iran. In a recorded video statement, Pezeshkian said the Iranian armed forces âare working and will continue working forcefully to destroy enemy bases and will disappoint them as before.❠He confirmed that an interim Leadership Council has started carrying out its responsibilities. (Photo by AA Video/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has warned of ‘consequences beyond our control’ after the attack on its South Pars gas field.

He warned the scope of the consequences would ‘engulf the entire world’.

Qatar is one of several Gulf Arab states that had been bracing for Iran’s retaliation after Israel struck Iranian facilities in the South Pars field, the world’s largest gas field, today.

Qatar calls Iran a ‘direct threat’ to region – adding it ‘reserves its right to respond’

Qatar has called the missile attack at Ras Laffan Industrial City a ‘direct threat to its national security and the stability to the region’.

The country’s foreign ministry wrote on social media:

The Iranian side continues its escalatory policies that are pushing the region toward the abyss and drawing in countries that are not parties to this crisis into the circle of conflict.

The statement added Qatar ‘reserves its right to respond’ and that it will ‘not hesitate to take all necessary measures to protect its sovereignty, security, and the safety of its citizens’.

‘Extensive damage’ from strikes on Ras Laffan, Qatar petroleum company says

QatarEnergy has released a statement confirming emergency response teams were ‘deployed immediately’ to contain the fire at Ras Laffan.

A spokesman said ‘extensive damage’ had been caused.

Kuwait reports 17 cases of ‘falling debris’

Smoke rises from a high-rise building following a drone attack in Kuwait City on March 8, 2026. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, sparking swift retaliation by the Islamic republic which responded with missile attacks across the region. The war has dragged in global powers, upended the world's energy and transport sectors, and brought chaos to even usually peaceful areas of the volatile region. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images) / Kuwait OUT

Kuwait’s Ministry of Interior has reported 17 cases of fallen debris.

This brings the total number of reports since attacks began to 421.

General Nasser Bouslaib, the ministry’s spokesman, added that 94 alert sirens had also been activated since then.

Saudi defences intercept four ballistic missiles over Riyadh

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Defence has said it intercepted and destroyed four missiles – which were ‘launched towards Riyadh’.

The General Directorate of Saudi Civil Defence stated that ‘initial assessments indicate no damage or injuries’.

It accompanied this with a warning that debris had scattered in areas across the city.

A social media post said:

Avoid gathering or filming, stay away from hazardous areas, and report any danger

Iranian building struck just 350 METRES from nuclear reactor

Satellite image shows the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, in Bushehr Province, Iran, May 26, 2025. 2025 Planet Labs PBC/Handout via REUTERS    THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. MANDATORY CREDIT.

The UN’s nuclear watchdog has now confirmed missiles struck a building just 350 metres from an Iranian nuclear plant reactor.

The structure was destroyed but there ‌was no damage to ‌the reactor itself, ​IAEA director general Rafael ⁠Grossi ⁠said.

Iran reported the incident in Bushehr city to the IAEA this morning.

Key Updates

  • JD Vance to meet US oil executives on Thursday – report

  • Iran gas field attacked in major escalation of US-Israel war

  • Britain has destroyed more than 40 Iranian drones since start of war

  • US intelligence contradicts Trump over Iranian nuclear enrichment

  • Iranian president confirms intelligence chief assassination

  • Oil prices rise above $108 a barrel as missile strikes Iranian gas facility

  • Thousands of Iranians pack Tehran for Ali Larijani’s funeral

  • Iran to launch attacks on Gulf energy sites after strike at gas facility

  • Trump lashes out at ‘non-responsive’ NATO allies again

  • Major Iranian gas facility struck by airstrikes – report

  • Swedish national executed in Iran

  • Kremlin condemns ‘murder’ of Iranian regime officials

  • IDF claims Esmaeil Khatib played ‘significant role’ in protest crackdown

  • Israel Katz: ‘We will hunt them all down’

  • Who is Esmaeil Khatib? Iran’s intelligence chief assassinated by Israel

  • Israel says Iran’s intelligence chief was killed in Tehran airstrike

  • Israel believes regime assassinations are sowing ‘chaos’ in Iranian leadership

  • Iran to hold funeral for slain security chief Ali Larijani

  • Attacks on Gulf countries continue: What’s the latest

  • 12 killed in Beirut strikes as Israel launches new attacks in Lebanon

  • Israel attempts to assassinate Iran’s intelligence chief in Tehran airstrike

  • Iran wreaks destruction across Israel after vowing revenge over Ali Larijani killing

  • Elderly couple killed in Israel after Iranian missile barrage

  • Gulf nations intercept drone and missile attacks

  • Iran warns war ‘will hit all’

  • Iran vows revenge over security chief’s assassination




Making ammunition in Canada ‘essential’ for independence: defence minister – National | Globalnews.ca


The federal government on Wednesday said it will spend $1.4 billion to boost Canada’s ammunition production, with Defence Minister David McGuinty calling it “essential” for Canada’s independence.

Making ammunition in Canada ‘essential’ for independence: defence minister – National | Globalnews.ca

McGuinty said the launch of the Canadian Defence Industry Resilience Program will be part of Canada’s broader Defence Industrial Strategy, which Prime Minister Mark Carney announced last month.


Click to play video: 'Carney announces Canada’s new defence industrial strategy'


Carney announces Canada’s new defence industrial strategy


“It’s a program that really means we’re trying to strengthen Canada’s ability to produce the defence equipment we need here at home,” he said.

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“The ability to produce our own ammunition is not optional, it’s essential. It strengthens our independence, it protects us from global supply disruptions and ensures that our armed forces have what they need, when they need it.”

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Through this program, IMT Precision will receive up to $306.4 million to build a new facility producing metal shells for 155-millimetre artillery projectiles, McGuinty said.

“These are critical components used by our armed forces and our allies and in high demand globally, including in Ukraine or even including in Latvia, where we have 3,000 forward-deployed members of the Canadian Armed Forces, where Canada is commanding a 14-nation multinational brigade,” he said.

McGuinty also announced plans to boost production of nitrocellulose – a critical component in propellants and ammunition – in Quebec.

He also announced $57.8 million in spending to establish Canada’s first facility for making charges for the M-231 and M-232 assault rifles, in addition to a $642-million investment to manufacture 155-millimetre high-explosive projectiles.



Click to play video: 'Canada’s defence minister says F-35 fighter jet purchase ‘remains under review’'


Canada’s defence minister says F-35 fighter jet purchase ‘remains under review’


“Taken together, these aren’t just investments. They’re building blocks of modern defence. They are how we ensure that Canada is prepared, not just for today, but for the future,” he said.

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Responding to a question from reporters, McGuinty said Canada was on track to achieve its goal of spending two per cent of its GDP on defence by March 31.

“Stay tuned, and this is not a last-minute spending spree. This is the culmination of years of work,” he said.

&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.


US allies need to get a grip – step up and help open the Strait of Hormuz



With friends like these: One real virtue of the Iran war is how it exposes once-hidden disloyalties.

That goes for the various cranks on the right we considered the other day, most prominently podcaster Tucker Carlson, formally “evicted” from MAGA by President Donald Trump and sadly now claiming the CIA is out to frame him.

Other big-ish righty names — Steve Bannon, Megyn Kelly, Marjorie Taylor Greene — are also denouncing Operation Epic Fury, marginally undermining a mission that has strong support among GOP voters and even more so among MAGA ones.

They’re not so much dividing the right, in other words, as declaring themselves unbalanced (or perhaps overly reliant on a fringe audience for their clicks).

A far bigger deal are the US “allies” declining Trump’s call for help, even if just symbolic, to open the Strait of Hormuz.

Even though little oil or natural gas flows through there to America, both are vital to the global markets Europeans and others now scrambling for rocks to hide beneath depend on.

“This is not our war, we have not started it,” squirms German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius.   

“It’s never been envisioned to be a NATO mission,” flutters UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Trump’s not asking for help in the war; he’s suggesting that countries that benefit from oil and gas that goes through the Strait should help get it flowing again.

Much as many of these same nations did join in NATO’s Operation Ocean Shield and the European Union’s Operation Atalanta to counter Somali piracy a decade or two back — with the navies of India and China playing an important role, too.

Then again, most of our European “allies” have let their navies shrink to almost nothing since then, with Starmer’s Britain especially pathetic.

Such cowardice now is a reminder of just how impotent these countries have become.

As Trump fumed on Truth Social, it seems NATO has become “a one way street – We will protect them, but they will do nothing for us.”

Or even for themselves — since they’re at risk now thanks to their climate-cult foolishness: Shunning fossil-fuel extraction and even shutting nuclear plants left them utterly at the mercy of the flow of foreign gas and oil.

More, their governments (especially left-wing ones) are ever more captive to increasingly powerful Muslim voting blocs after enormous waves of immigration and failed attempts at societal integration. 

Sending even a few ships would matter, letting Iran know its gambit is failing to divide the West.

Trump says he asked for help from some countries “not because we need them” but to show he was right in predicting that “if we ever did need them, they won’t be there.”

It all brings to mind Winston Churchill’s remark after Britain and France joined Israel to recapture another key waterway, the Suez Canal, from Egypt in 1956 — only to be slapped down by Washington: “I would never have dared,” but “if I had dared, I would certainly never have dared stop.”

Trump’s bid to completely defang the Islamic Republic (which had managed to accumulate enough enriched uranium for 11 nuclear bombs) was long overdue.

Western leaders don’t have to endorse his actions, but now that he has acted, they owe it to America to stand by him — and step up.

This is a global problem, if ever there was one. It needs a global response.


NATO hasn’t received formal request for Strait of Hormuz help, Anand says – National | Globalnews.ca


To Canada’s knowledge, no formal request to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has been made to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said after U.S. President Donald Trump’s public appeal to that effect, as the oil shock from the Iran war continues.

Making ammunition in Canada ‘essential’ for independence: defence minister – National | Globalnews.ca

On Monday, Trump called on members of NATO — which includes Canada — and other nations to help the U.S. secure the Strait, which Iran has throttled for two weeks and through which around 20 per cent of the world’s oil supply passes.

“To our knowledge, a request has not been made to NATO for the type of assistance that is being requested and Canada, as a founding member of NATO, continues to support the principles of collective defence,” she said.

“At this point, it’s important to remember that those conversations among NATO allies have not occurred.”

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Click to play video: 'Anand reiterates Canada will not participate in Iran war'


Anand reiterates Canada will not participate in Iran war


On Monday, Trump said “numerous countries” had told him they were “on the way” to help the U.S. with the Strait of Hormuz.

“We strongly encourage the other nations to get involved with us and get involved quickly and with great enthusiasm,” he said.

However, Trump said in a Truth Social post Tuesday that “most” NATO allies had rebuffed his request.

“The United States has been informed by most of our NATO ‘Allies’ that they don’t want to get involved with our Military Operation against the Terrorist Regime of Iran, in the Middle East,” Trump wrote, “despite the fact that almost every Country strongly agreed with what we are doing, and that Iran cannot, in any way, shape, or form, be allowed to have a Nuclear Weapon.

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“Because of the fact that we have had such Military Success, we no longer “need,” or desire, the NATO Countries’ assistance — WE NEVER DID! Likewise, Japan, Australia, or South Korea. In fact, speaking as President of the United States of America, by far the Most Powerful Country Anywhere in the World, WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE!”

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Click to play video: 'US-Iran war: Trump demands other countries help protect Strait of Hormuz'


US-Iran war: Trump demands other countries help protect Strait of Hormuz


Anand said it would be “prudent” for Trump to “turn to the principles upon which NATO was founded, and in particular the principles of collective defence and deterrence, which are triggered by NATO as a whole, not by one country within the NATO family.”

She reiterated Canada’s position that Ottawa was not consulted before the U.S. and Israel launched military action in Iran and added that Tehran’s blockage of the Strait of Hormuz was contrary to international law.

In his post, Trump repeated comments he made to reporters at multiple White House events on Monday that he believed NATO is a “one way street — we will protect them, but they will do nothing for us, in particular, in a time of need.”

The only time NATO’s Article 5 commitment to mutual self-defence has ever been invoked was after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States.

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In October 2001, the U.S. called upon NATO allies to participate in an international coalition in Afghanistan to destroy al-Qaeda, which had used the country as its base, and the group’s Taliban hosts. Dozens of countries answered the call, including Canada, which lost 158 military personnel and a Canadian diplomat between 2001 and 2014 when Canadian forces withdrew.

Trump angered NATO allies in January when he told Fox News in an interview that non-U.S. troops “stayed a little back, a little off the front lines” in Afghanistan.


At the time, Trump was repeatedly questioning whether the transatlantic military alliance would come to the aid of the U.S. while defending his push to acquire Greenland from Denmark, a NATO ally.


Click to play video: 'Trump warns NATO of ‘very bad’ future amid Strait of Hormuz crisis'


Trump warns NATO of ‘very bad’ future amid Strait of Hormuz crisis


In a Financial Times interview on Sunday, Trump said NATO would suffer a “very bad future” if it did not help the U.S. in the Middle East.

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“It’s only appropriate that people who are the beneficiaries of the Strait will help to make sure that nothing bad happens there,” Trump told the Financial Times.

“If there’s no response or if it’s a negative response I think it will be very bad for the future of NATO.”

The U.S. was hitting Iran “very hard,” Trump said.

“They’ve got nothing left but to make a little trouble in the Strait … these people are beneficiaries and they ought to help us police it,” he said, adding that “China should help too,” citing China’s energy dependence on oil from the Strait of Hormuz.

On Monday, Trump said some of his requests to countries for help was less out of need “but because I want to find out how they react.”

Trump said Tuesday that the U.S. has “decimated” Iran’s military.

“Their Navy is gone, their Air Force is gone, their Anti-Aircraft and Radar is gone and perhaps, most importantly, their Leaders, at virtually every level, are gone, never to threaten us, our Middle Eastern Allies, or the World, again!” he wrote.

Iran fired new salvos of missiles and drones at its Gulf Arab neighbours on Tuesday as well as on oil infrastructure in the region, the latest sign that the war was far from over.

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Defence Minister David McGuinty told reporters on Monday that Canada was “leaving the door open” to providing assistance to any Gulf nation that requires help in defending from Iranian attacks, but that so far it had not received any such requests.

“The question of the White House’s overture to NATO members and participation in the Strait of Hormuz is something that all NATO members are examining,” he said then.

“We’ve always managed to find a way to manage our relationship with the United States and we will manage our way through this as well.”