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Europe Today: Trump dominiert NATO-Gipfel mit neuen Iran-Angriffen
Neue US-Angriffe auf Iran überschatten das Ende des NATO-Gipfels mit Rekordrüstungszusagen und Ukraine-Hilfe. Die EU ringt mit Migration, OLAF sprengt ein Netzwerk gefälschter Kondome, die WM erreicht die Viertelfinals.
LESEN SIE MEHR : http://de.euronews.com/2026/07/09/europe-today-trump-dominiert-nato-gipfel-mit-neuen-iran-angriffen
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Neue US-Angriffe auf Iran überschatten das Ende des NATO-Gipfels mit Rekordrüstungszusagen und Ukraine-Hilfe. Die EU ringt mit Migration, OLAF sprengt ein Netzwerk gefälschter Kondome, die WM erreicht die Viertelfinals.
LESEN SIE MEHR : http://de.euronews.com/2026/07/09/europe-today-trump-dominiert-nato-gipfel-mit-neuen-iran-angriffen
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00:01Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
00:31Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
01:00Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
01:30in der Middle East
01:31Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
01:46Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
01:47Schöna-Murray, who's been following the summit
01:49all week for us.
01:51Well, good morning, Maeve. Look, we know that the object of this summit
01:53really was for NATO allies in Europe
01:55and Canada to prove that they're on
01:57a credible path to spending 5%
01:59of GDP on defence by
02:012035 as agreed at the
02:03last NATO summit. And I think we can say that
02:05they achieved that part for sure.
02:07We saw at the NATO Industry
02:09Defence Forum, there was $50
02:11billion committed to of new
02:13capabilities when it comes to
02:15submarines, aircraft, ammunition
02:17interceptors, all very
02:19important to protect the European continent as well
02:21as the Arctic in the medium to long
02:23term. There was also this NATO
02:25drone edge, which is drones and anti-drone
02:27technology, which also includes the
02:29recruitment and training of pilots
02:31for use all across NATO
02:33territory. Very important at the moment because
02:35we see all these drone incursions taking place
02:37across the Baltics and Poland and other
02:39parts of NATO. In addition, we
02:41saw Donald Trump having a better relationship with
02:43Vladimir Zelensky, the Ukrainian president
02:45and appeared to approve the
02:47Ukrainians the licence
02:48to manufacture their own Patriot
02:51defence systems, which is very important
02:53in terms of the Ukrainian air
02:55defence. But as with
02:57Donald Trump, you know, you're only
02:59one sort of issue away from the
03:01whole summit being upended. And we
03:03nearly had that because when he arrived,
03:05he castigated his allies over the war
03:07in Iran. And he also
03:09made the comment that the United States would like to
03:11control Greenland over
03:13Denmark. Take a listen to John
03:15Bolton, his former national security
03:17adviser, saying that Donald Trump
03:18does this just to court controversy.
03:21He's trolling people,
03:23as they say. In the first term,
03:25I was in his office once he was
03:27dictating a tweet and he told the person
03:29typing the tweet, capitalize
03:30all the letters in that last sentence,
03:33which which a lot of people
03:34drives them. It just is
03:37very, very distracting for people.
03:38And he turned and said to me, do you know why I just
03:40said that? And I said, no, why?
03:42And he said, because it drives them crazy.
03:45So why does he talk about
03:46taking Greenland? Because it
03:48drives them crazy. That's what it's about.
03:51So that was John Bolton,
03:52Donald Trump's former national security adviser,
03:54making the point that Donald Trump makes
03:56these outlandish statements in order to create
03:58division. But we have to
04:00listen to the prime minister of Denmark as
04:02well yesterday, Mette Frederiksen.
04:04And she made the point that Denmark
04:06takes these comments very seriously.
04:08She said that Denmark was ready
04:10to protect all of Danish,
04:12Greenlandish and NATO territory.
04:13But she called on the United States to respect
04:15the sovereignty of Greenland and Denmark.
04:17And I think it's worth also pointing out that
04:19the prime minister of Greenland just a few
04:21months ago said that when he met the US
04:23envoy to Greenland, that the United
04:25States had not changed the position
04:26when it comes to taking over or
04:29having Greenland.
04:30So this is still an issue that is
04:32particularly ongoing and
04:34should be taken seriously.
04:35I think that's the point as well.
04:36Maeve.
04:37OK, Shona Murray, thank you so much
04:39for that update there from
04:40Ankara. And now to dive deeper
04:42into the outcomes of that NATO
04:43summit, we can bring in
04:44Jamie Shea, former NATO security
04:46adviser who spent many years here
04:48in the headquarters of NATO in
04:50Brussels. Jamie Shea, thank you so much
04:51for joining us.
04:53Curious to hear your view.
04:54Was this a successful NATO
04:56gathering?
04:57I think, yes, ultimately
04:59it was. And good morning to you
05:00too. And thanks for having me on the
05:01show. It ended better than
05:03it started. Clearly, Trump
05:05was in a more friendly
05:07mood towards the alliance in the
05:09private meeting. And I suppose
05:10that's the one that really counts
05:11than in some of his public
05:13remarks. For example, he did say
05:15that the US is staying in the
05:16alliance.
05:17Somebody like Trump hearing that
05:19is not always to be taken for
05:21granted.
05:22He signed off on a
05:24communique, which may not be the
05:26most interesting thing for the
05:27media, but it's important for
05:28diplomats. The official text where
05:30the US committed itself to NATO
05:33Article 5 collective defence and
05:35called it ironclad. These were the
05:36kind of things that the allies
05:38wanted to hear.
05:39And of course, he also
05:41showed some satisfaction,
05:44unsurprisingly, with the fact that
05:45his message on defence spending
05:47has been heeded.
05:49Mark Rutter and the other allies
05:50were at pains to point out that over
05:52the last year, Europe and Canada
05:54have spent 11 percent more
05:55on defence.
05:57The figure now is about an extra
05:59250 billion dollars over the last
06:02two years on military budgets.
06:04So although five allies out of the
06:0732 today are on that 5 percent
06:10target, so there's still a long way
06:11to go.
06:12Allies have until 2035, but all of
06:15them practically with a few
06:16laggards are moving in the right
06:18direction.
06:19So the summit was designed, of course,
06:21to be a Trump-pleasing summit by
06:23showing that the responsibility for
06:25NATO is moving both financially
06:27and militarily onto Europe.
06:29So I think, yes, you know, people
06:31were expecting a rough ride with
06:32Trump.
06:32You always get that.
06:34But, you know, as they said about
06:35Wagner's music, it's better than it
06:38sounds.
06:39And I think it ended up on a more
06:40positive note than people had
06:42feared when Trump first arrived
06:44in Ankara.
06:45As you saw, months of work, of
06:47course, goes into organising these
06:48summits.
06:48As you say, officials are happy for
06:50now.
06:51But, of course, Trump was very
06:52critical of allies like Spain and
06:54the UK.
06:54Is this really the end of NATO, do
06:56you think, as we know it?
06:57No, I don't believe so.
06:59But whether Trump doesn't like
07:01NATO or does the messaging
07:03changes, I think, you know, if you
07:04look at the trend line, it's been
07:06pretty clear now and for a decade
07:09or so already, which is that the
07:11United States is going to stay in
07:12NATO, which is good, but it's going
07:14to do a lot less in terms of holding
07:16up the collective defence than allies
07:18were used to during the Cold War.
07:19For example, just at a NATO defence
07:21minister's meeting a couple of days
07:23before the Ankara summit, the US
07:25Secretary of War, Pete Hegssef,
07:27announced a number of significant
07:28reductions in US contributions to the
07:31NATO full structure.
07:32You know, only one aircraft carrier
07:34now instead of two, one strategic
07:36bomber instead of two, far fewer
07:38drones, far fewer fighter aircraft.
07:41And Europe has had to scramble to sort
07:44of find in its own arsenals those
07:46capabilities to replace the US.
07:48We have the specter of 5000 US troops
07:51leaving Germany.
07:53They may, some of them may go to
07:55Poland, but it's not certain.
07:57I mean, the good news is that the
07:58United States continues to uphold
08:00nuclear deterrence for Europe.
08:01That's important and stays in the
08:03NATO command structure.
08:04But everybody now is talking about
08:06NATO 3.0, whereby they mean a NATO
08:10which is going to be run, financed,
08:13resourced, operated, you know,
08:14Europeans in the front line, much more
08:17a European show and less an American
08:19show than the NATO we've all been used
08:21to from our fathers and grandfathers.
08:24And just on Iran, though, we saw, of
08:26course, the war flare up in the last
08:28couple of days.
08:30Trump says the ceasefire is over.
08:32Where do we go from here, Jamie Shea?
08:34Well, I think we need to wait and see
08:36because clearly the talks with Iran have
08:38not yet been broken off, even if they're
08:41not going anywhere fast.
08:42I think, you know, Trump knows from
08:44opinion polling in the United States and
08:46even the Senate passing the wars, a
08:48war powers resolution that this war is
08:51not popular at home, even with his own
08:53Republican MAGA base.
08:55The Americans want him to end the war
08:57and he's got the midterm elections
08:59coming up.
08:59So, you know, I don't think he
09:01voluntarily wants to get back into a
09:03full scale war against Iran.
09:06And for Europe, of course, it's very bad
09:08news because if Trump, on the one hand,
09:10wants Europe to spend all of this extra
09:11money on defense, the last thing you
09:13want to do is tank the European
09:15economies with higher oil prices and
09:17inflation and higher debt costs, which
09:20are going to make it so much more
09:21difficult to fund defense.
09:23And, you know, Europe was sort of
09:24hoping for a breathing space with the
09:26oil price going down to sixty dollars
09:28a barrel.
09:29It's now up five percent.
09:30You know, who knows where it's going
09:31to go?
09:32And therefore, all of the kind of
09:33pressures that we had a couple of
09:34months ago, including, of course,
09:36things like, you know, fertilizer, not
09:38getting out of the Gulf to feed
09:39hungry people in Africa, all of those
09:41difficult scenarios are going to
09:42return.
09:43But let's wait and see, because I
09:45think it's Trump's interest to keep
09:47this memorandum of understanding
09:48going and talks with Iran going.
09:51And therefore, you know, both sides
09:53may choose after, you know, a flurry of
09:55activity to de-escalate once more.
09:58OK, Jamie Shea, always a pleasure to
09:59have you on the program.
10:00Thank you so much for joining us live
10:02this morning.
10:02And now for the humanitarian lens on
10:05all of this, we're joined here in the
10:06studio by Jean-Nicolas Beuze from the
10:08UNHCR here in Brussels.
10:10Good morning.
10:10Thank you so much for joining us.
10:12And of course, as we're reporting there,
10:13the war in Iran really flaring up
10:15again.
10:15What does that mean for your job and for,
10:17of course, migration flows and the
10:18humanitarian aspect?
10:20So every time that bombs are being
10:22dropped or drones, attacks occur, we
10:25have people who are forced to leave
10:26their home, whether it's in Iran, in
10:28Ukraine or in Sudan.
10:30So we can expect that some people last
10:33night had to flee their home because
10:34they were destroyed, but also many of us
10:36will flee as a preventative measure
10:39because they are afraid that they are
10:40the next target.
10:41What we saw in the case of Iran,
10:43specifically earlier this year, is
10:45that more, according to official
10:47figure, more than one million people
10:48were displaced, mainly to rural areas,
10:51to avoid the urban center, which were
10:53targeted, but have no come back.
10:56Except that for 150,000 families who
10:59have their house destroyed, they will
11:01not be able to come back.
11:03So that's where the humanitarian, UNHCR
11:06and others have to step in to provide
11:08some support with the authorities in
11:10the case of Iran.
11:11And how are you providing that support
11:12when cuts are being, you know, there's
11:15many cutbacks to your organization.
11:16We're hearing as well Trump saying that
11:17the bombing could get, quote, much
11:20worse.
11:21Every time we have to make choice, we
11:23have to decide, we have to prioritize
11:24who we are going to help.
11:26Are we going to help the mothers with
11:28three children or the mothers with seven
11:30children?
11:30Are we going to help the elderly people
11:33who have no support?
11:34Every time it's a choice because indeed,
11:37over the last two years, three years,
11:39the humanitarian partners have seen the
11:42budget put at their disposal by donor
11:45countries, the US, the European Union,
11:49the Gulf countries, really shrink to
11:50almost less than half of what we had
11:53three years ago.
11:54And the needs are continuing rising, so
11:56therefore we are unable to help everyone.
11:58And meanwhile, it's already one month
12:00since the EU's migration and asylum pact
12:02has come into force.
12:03What has changed in your view?
12:04So we will see the test is really the
12:06implementation in every of the 27
12:09member states.
12:10We will see whether it will make the
12:11decision faster, fairer, whether it will
12:14make the life of the decision maker
12:15easier and less costly for us, the
12:18taxpayer, because it will be a more rapid
12:21decision.
12:22But also whether the principle, the
12:25protection principle behind the asylum
12:27system in Europe will help.
12:29Are we going to continue not detaining
12:31people or people will seek asylum will
12:34be systematically detained?
12:35Are we going to give them legal aid so
12:37they can navigate the asylum procedure,
12:40which are quite complex?
12:41Or are we going to lose, leave them alone,
12:44figuring out what needs to be done with
12:46appeal and appeal, which are very costly
12:48for us?
12:49So the test now is really in the
12:50implementation.
12:51And a big focus now, of course, on returns.
12:53And we saw technical talks take place
12:55recently here between officials from the
12:56Commission and the Taliban.
12:58What was your view of this encounter?
12:59So what we need to remind everyone is
13:02that a country may be in different
13:06phases.
13:06We're speaking about Afghanistan with the
13:08Taliban.
13:08We're speaking about Syria with a new
13:10regime and probably more hope for people
13:12to return.
13:13And we're speaking about Sudan, where the
13:15return is not possible because it's a
13:18dire situation with the conflict and
13:20farming increasing.
13:21What is really important for the European
13:23Union is to keep the principle that nobody
13:26shall be returned to a possible situation
13:29of harm.
13:30And harm can come from different actors, from
13:33different situations.
13:34So before sending anyone to Afghanistan,
13:37Syria or Sudan, we need to ensure that there's an
13:41individual assessment.
13:42Will this person be able to regain control over
13:46their life without being put at risk?
13:48Okay.
13:49Jean-Nicolas Boos, thank you so much for coming
13:50on to us here and being our guest on Europe
13:52today.
13:52But now moving on to another story, the EU's
13:55anti-fraud wing, OLAV, has caught an
13:57international trafficking operation responsible
14:00for counterfeit condoms.
14:01They're untested, uncontrolled and unsafe.
14:04Jakob Janis has the story.
14:07It would be an easy topic to laugh at if it wasn't a
14:11matter of public health.
14:12Brussels' anti-fraud investigators at OLAV
14:15just broke up an international smuggling
14:16group.
14:17And criminals tried to slip their illegal cargo
14:20past European border checks using a bizarre
14:22disguise.
14:23They declared their shipments as children's toys
14:26to evade customs controls.
14:28But there was a problem because the boxes did not
14:30contain toys at all.
14:33The cross-border network distributed more than
14:36200,000 counterfeit condoms across the continent.
14:40Smugglers targeted three specific nations as
14:42their main entry hubs – Romania, Serbia and Spain.
14:46And when the border teams intercepted the fakes, it
14:49turned out they all come from a single source in
14:51China.
14:52And the total black market value of this illegal
14:54shipment sits at over 200,000 euros.
14:57But you see, potential health costs will be much
15:00higher.
15:00The European anti-fraud office warns these fakes
15:03are untested and unsafe.
15:05Or, in plain English, they can spread infections and
15:08cause unplanned pregnancies.
15:10But there is also a bigger picture here.
15:13Fake condoms are just one part of the massive black
15:16market boom across the continent.
15:18And I'll give you an example.
15:20Last year, a global Interpol crackdown seized 57 million
15:24euros worth of counterfeit medicines.
15:26And this part is important.
15:29When it comes to Europe, the main targets were fake weight loss
15:32pens and cosmetic and performance enhancing peptide
15:35supplements.
15:36For distribution, criminals do not even need to use the dark web
15:39anymore.
15:40They simply flood social media to sell their knockoffs straight to
15:44your feed.
15:44But back to our fake condoms.
15:47Brussels claims this raid proves European enforcement works.
15:51But it also shows how criminals exploit the system.
15:54The continent still remains open to black market fakes.
15:57And with countless cases going unnoticed, it might look like Europe is
16:01left without protection.
16:07Yeah, could be honest there.
16:08And now it's time for our World Cup segment.
16:16Well, following a day without World Cup action, after 27 days of games,
16:21goals and emotions, just eight teams remain.
16:24Six European, one African and one from the Americas.
16:27One side will be eliminated every day until Sunday.
16:30So here's four things that you should know about the quarterfinals.
16:34First, France probably remains the favourites.
16:36But standing in their way are Morocco, who, just like in 2022, are the only
16:41African team left at this stage.
16:43This time, though, they arrive as African champions and have a much more
16:47mature side.
16:47So expect a very good fight.
16:50Then Spain, who's the only team yet to concede a goal, with Unai Simone
16:54breaking the record for the longest run without conceding in the tournament's
16:58history.
16:58The question now, of course, can Belgium end that run?
17:01Now, the Red Devils definitely have some renewed confidence after knocking out
17:05one of the tournament's co-hosts, the United States.
17:08They've also faced Spain in the World Cup twice, losing in 1990 and winning in 1986
17:13with a penalty shootout.
17:15And third, one team will be playing its first ever World Cup quarterfinals.
17:19And that's, of course, Norway.
17:21They've risen 12 places in FIFA's World Cup ranking since the start of the tournament,
17:26from 31st to 19th.
17:27If they beat England, they could enter the top 10.
17:30The clash will see two of the tournament's deadliest strikers go head-to-head.
17:34I'm talking, of course, about Erling Haaland and Harry Kane.
17:37So that is a match not to be missed.
17:40And finally, Messi.
17:41After leading Argentina to a late victory over Egypt with a goal and an assist, he became
17:46the very first player to score in nine consecutive World Cup matches.
17:50Messi is the tournament's all-time assist hero and he's the first player, aged 30 or
17:55over, to score eight goals at a single World Cup.
17:58What record is left for him to break and can he keep it going against Switzerland?
18:02Stay tuned and enjoy the games.
18:04But that brings this edition of Europe Today to an end.
18:07Thank you so much for tuning in, as always.
18:09Reach out to us if you have any points, comments or questions.
18:12EuropeToday at yournews.com.
18:14That is our email address.
18:15But from all of us, thank you so much for tuning in.
18:18Take care and see you very soon on Euronews.
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