At the NATO summit in Ankara, US President Donald Trump claimed he is Iran’s top assassination target but insisted the threats would not affect his decisions. He stressed that safeguarding America and preventing Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons outweighed personal risks, dismissing speculation that security concerns influenced his travel plans.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rejected Donald Trump's renewed demand for US control of Greenland, reaffirming the island's right to self-determination. NATO leaders meanwhile focused on defence spending, alliance unity, Ukraine, and escalating tensions following US strikes on Iran
Donald Trump arrived in Ankara for the NATO summit, aiming to push allies to rapidly increase defence spending, strengthen burden-sharing and expand defence cooperation. He is also scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with Volodymyr Zelensky and Ahmed al-Sharaa
Leaders gather for the NATO summit in Ankara amid disagreements over Iran, defence spending and the alliance's future. European allies remain divided over US priorities, while protests against NATO and rising military expenditure highlight growing public skepticism across member states
Donald Trump is set to attend the NATO summit in Turkey at President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s invitation, amid warming US-Turkey ties. Discussions may include defence deals such as F-35 jets and engine sales, despite ongoing congressional opposition and geopolitical tensions
Kiev: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has addressed a NATO summit through a video link, urging more defence and financial assistance for Ukraine, the presidential press service reported. In his speech, Zelensky on Wednesday said that Ukraine needs modern missile and air defence systems to protect its cities, and artillery to stand against Russia on the […]