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Spain plays down Trump’s trade embargo threat, saying there is ‘no tension’

US president threatened to cut off trade with Spain over its defence policy, but Madrid says relations are ‘calm’ and ‘positive’

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US President Donald Trump (right) looks at Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez during a working session at the Nato leaders’ meeting in Ankara. Photo: dpa
Xiaofei Xuin Paris

Spain remained calm in the face of US President Donald Trump’s latest attack on Wednesday – which saw him order a halt to all trade with the country – as Madrid stressed its relationship with Washington remained “positive”.

Trump called Spain a “wasted cause” and “hopeless, bad people” during comments to reporters ahead of a Nato leaders’ meeting in Ankara, and ordered officials to cut off trade with the country – the second time Trump has made such a threat since March.
The US leader has repeatedly voiced frustration at the Spanish government’s stance on defence policy, including its lack of support for the US-Israel war on Iran and its opposition to Nato’s latest defence spending target of 5 per cent of gross domestic product.

However, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said during a media briefing later in the day that he had spoken with Trump after the outburst, and that relations with America remained constructive.

“I had the chance to have an informal chat with the president of the United States … there was absolutely no tension of any kind,” he said, adding that the pair had discussed the World Cup.

Madrid had received the US president’s statements with “calm and patience, and a certain sense of normality”, Sanchez said, noting it was not the first time Spain had faced such criticism.

The US president cannot just stop the economic activity between two countries
Miguel Otero-Iglesias, Elcano Royal Institute
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