≈ 29°C Kolkata Wednesday, June 10, 2026
LATEST NEWS
West Bengal Cabinet Portfolios Announced: Suvendu Adhikari Retains Home, Swapan Dasgupta Gets Finance | Giorgia Meloni Hails PM Modi as India’s Longest-Serving Elected Prime Minister | Bengaluru’s Srishti Kiran Becomes World No. 1 in U-13 Tennis Rankings | Narendra Modi Surpasses Jawaharlal Nehru to Become India's Longest-Serving Democratically Elected Prime Minister | Sushmita Dev has resigned as a TMC Rajya Sabha Member of Parliament | Cricket: Ruturaj Gaikwad’s century helps India A beat Sri Lanka A by 8 runs in tri-series opener in Dambulla. | US military launches strikes against Iran in response to downing of Army Apache helicopter off Oman coast. | US military launches strikes against Iran in response to downing of Army Apache helicopter off Oman coast. | Thomas Tuchel Confirms Full Squad Availability Ahead of England's Final World Cup Warm-Up Against Costa Rica | Football Star Harry Kane Playfully Offers Services to RCB and England Cricket | Serena Williams Makes Triumphant Return with First Win in Four Years at Queen’s Club | Iran Downs U.S. Apache Helicopter Over Strait of Hormuz; Trump Vows Response | PM Narendra Modi to Visit France and Slovakia from June 13–18, 2026 | MR Arjun-Hariharan Advance to Second Round of Australian Badminton Open | China's Xi Jinping starts a two-day trip to North Korea, pledging closer ties with Kim Jong Un in his first Pyongyang visit since 2019. | Ashwini Vaishnaw Promises New Era for Kolkata Metro with 60 Modern Trains |

Trump Slams NATO as ‘Paper Tiger’ Amid Tensions Over Iran Strategy

By Editorial Team 👁 75
​In a bold escalation of rhetoric, President Donald Trump has lashed out at NATO allies, labeling the decades-old alliance a "paper tiger" and suggesting that U.S. participation is now "beyond reconsideration." The remarks come as the administration navigates a complex military and diplomatic standoff with Iran, where the President claims certain allies have failed to step up. ​"We Didn't Need Them" ​Speaking on the lack of support from European partners regarding the U.S. mission in the Middle East, President Trump didn't hold back. ​"We've had some very good allies over there. We've had some very bad allies in NATO," the President stated. "I was really asking because I wanted to see what they'd do. We didn't need them... the last thing I needed was NATO stepping in our way." ​The President's comments suggest that his recent "asks" for NATO involvement were less about military necessity and more of a litmus test for the alliance’s loyalty and effectiveness. By calling NATO a "paper tiger," Trump is signaling a historic shift in U.S. foreign policy, questioning whether the alliance provides any real value to American interests in 2026. ​The Iran Factor ​The friction appears to stem from a disagreement over the Strait of Hormuz and the broader U.S. strategy to neutralize Iran's nuclear capabilities. While the Trump administration has moved aggressively to secure global energy routes, many NATO members have been hesitant to commit forces, citing the defensive nature of the North Atlantic Treaty’s Article 5 ​Trump dismissed this hesitation, suggesting that the U.S. has spent "trillions of dollars" on an organization that refuses to act when American interests are at stake. ​A Crossroads for the Alliance ​With Secretary of State Marco Rubio also calling for a "re-examination" of the treaty, the future of the Transatlantic alliance has never been more uncertain. As the U.S. nears its objectives in the Iran conflict, the President seems ready to move forward with or without the backing of traditional European powers.
Share this article

Comments (0)