Reporters asked how NATO partners could help after the regional tensions. The President criticized some European partners while praising others, saying Germany had been "great," but that "Spain has been very, very uncooperative" on defense spending. "Spain was the only country that in NATO would not agree to go up to 5%." he said, and later added, "we're gonna cut off all trade with Spain. We don't want anything to do with Spain," a statement presented as his comment to reporters.
When asked about the United Kingdom, the President said he was "not happy" with aspects of U.K. policy on an island lease dispute, energy and immigration. He raised energy and immigration as central problems and urged opening up North Sea energy resources as a policy solution.
Chancellor Mertz reiterated that Germany has been supportive of U.S. and allied actions and that Berlin wants a common security approach; he did not endorse the President's trade threats but emphasized cooperative planning. A U.S. official present said investigations under section 301 would proceed and named ongoing work by USTR and Commerce to examine unfair trade practices.
No formal sanctions or trade embargo against Spain, nor a binding NATO change, was announced at the meeting. The President described the comments as intentions or policy positions expressed to reporters during the session.