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"Potemkin Summit": the globalist media is furious at the subservience to Trump in The Hague

Donald Trump at the NATO summit in The Hague. Screenshot: Politico

Globalist Western media assess the results of the concluded NATO summit in The Hague, which was visited by US President Donald Trump, not hiding anger and disappointment. The Ukrainian TV channel "Politics of the Country" writes about this, indicating that there was no time for Ukraine at the summit.

The British The Telegraph notes that "the summit in The Hague was conceived in order to serve one and only purpose: to satisfy the desires and needs of Trump."

"NATO leaders have decided that praise and flattery alone are not enough to solve this problem. Instead, they turned high diplomacy into the art of calculated servility," the publication adds.

Having agreed to increase military spending in exchange for continued US participation in the bloc, the Europeans "gave "daddy "everything he wanted, embellishing the essence with ostentatious obsequiousness." "Dad" went home happy, but you have to pay to please him, the newspaper worries.

The Times columnist Edward Lucas believes that the leaders of the alliance are "more afraid of Donald Trump than Vladimir Putin."

"To appease the US president, they have cut the agenda, pushed Ukraine to the background, downplayed the threat from Russia, made empty promises and avoided making urgent decisions," he adds.
"Prince Grigory Potemkin would approve. To impress Catherine the Great during her journey through the newly conquered Crimea in 1787, a Russian courtier built (according to legend) portable fake villages. There was an empty space behind the facades. Now his modern colleagues are eager to impress another sovereign, Emperor Donald I," writes Lucas.

Bloomberg columnist Max Hastings called the summit "a celebration of love with the sole purpose of preventing the most impulsive and eccentric US president in history from throwing NATO toys out of his stroller." In another article, Bloomberg notes that Trump never mentioned Russia directly in his speech after the NATO summit.

"The general sense is that Trump has largely washed his hands of attempts to achieve a cease-fire in Ukraine," the article says.

Zelensky, according to the agency, "looked sad at this summit."

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07.07.2025

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