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Europe Today: NATO-Gipfel in Ankara startet unter Trump-Druck für mehr Rüstungsgeld
In Ankara beraten NATO-Staats- und Regierungschefs auf einem zweitägigen Gipfel unter Druck von Donald Trump über höhere Verteidigungsausgaben. In Paris erfährt Marine Le Pen, ob sie trotz eines Berufungsurteils wegen Veruntreuung 2025 für das Präsidentenamt kandidieren darf.
LESEN SIE MEHR : http://de.euronews.com/2026/07/07/europe-today-nato-gipfel-in-ankara-startet-unter-trumps-druck-fur-mehr-rustungsausgaben
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In Ankara beraten NATO-Staats- und Regierungschefs auf einem zweitägigen Gipfel unter Druck von Donald Trump über höhere Verteidigungsausgaben. In Paris erfährt Marine Le Pen, ob sie trotz eines Berufungsurteils wegen Veruntreuung 2025 für das Präsidentenamt kandidieren darf.
LESEN SIE MEHR : http://de.euronews.com/2026/07/07/europe-today-nato-gipfel-in-ankara-startet-unter-trumps-druck-fur-mehr-rustungsausgaben
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04:21capabilities for ourselves.
04:23Indeed, and that has to happen because the United States
04:26has made significant announcements of
04:28withdrawing capabilities
04:29available to NATO. What harm
04:31do you think that has on NATO
04:33overall? I don't think it will
04:35do any harm because I think that a
04:37strong Europe that is willing and able
04:39to deliver to make sure that
04:41it invests in defence spending
04:44makes a stronger NATO.
04:46So I think that what
04:47President Trump is asking,
04:49it is not new.
04:51The previous president also asked the same
04:53thing about NATO members. Please
04:55step up. Don't rely on one
04:57ally. And I think that he's rightful to do
04:59so. And if you look at me,
05:01I'm the Minister of Defence in the Netherlands, and I
05:03think that I have to be responsible for the security
05:05and safety of my people
05:07within the alignment of the NATO.
05:09So it's very important that I also deliver,
05:11make sure that we invest, and make
05:13sure that we are a strong
05:15partner. And of course, this summit has
05:17been described by Mark Roche as
05:19a crucial summit because of this.
05:21But would you say that this is really the start of the
05:24Europeanisation of NATO?
05:25Europe really taking control of
05:27NATO in some ways?
05:29Well, I think we should be able to be strong partners. That is the key. So the US will,
05:35of course, be one of the most important allies, such as Turkey, very strong armies, a lot of
05:41spending. And but, you know, Europe has to deliver as well. So last year in the Hague, we promised a
05:47lot. But it's only worth those promises if you really deliver. So today, I hope that I will see that
05:53from my colleagues and colleagues who are not delivering. I will be talking to them as well.
05:58Because this is we should we have to do this together, united. As you well know, we have a war
06:03on our own continent. We have an enemy facing us put in. And it's very important that we are also
06:09able to stand up.
06:12What we will hear from Donald Trump, undoubtedly, is his severe anger over what he says is NATO allies abandoning
06:19the United States when it comes to the war in Iran. Now, we know that Germany and the UK did
06:23give the US plenty of basing rights and access to military bases. But that sort of that doesn't really matter
06:28to Donald Trump. He is very annoyed at NATO. What do you expect from today? How will you respond? How
06:33will you placate him?
06:34Well, I think it's crucial that we all have a cool and calm head because, you know, we should be
06:42united. We have enemies against us. And those enemies fear us with reason because united we stay strong. So whatever
06:49today and tomorrow will happen, you will hear from me only this message. We need to be united. We need
06:57solidarity. We need to deliver. So just stay calm and make sure that you do your job.
07:03In a word, do you think that the tide is turning in the war in Ukraine? Do you think that
07:07that's why Donald Trump is also being a bit more supportive because he likes to back the winner?
07:12I don't know what the reason might be, but I think it's very important that we support Ukraine. You are
07:16completely right. There is a window. There is a momentum right now.
07:19And Ukraine is doing such a good job in standing firm, protecting and also not only its own country, but
07:27the rest of Europe.
07:28So I hope that many other countries will also not only pledge, but deliver for Ukraine. The Netherlands has been
07:36doing so since the beginning of the war. We are in the top three or five countries in the world
07:40supporting Ukraine.
07:41And I hope to see many more colleagues adding, adding up, making sure that they have the car productions on
07:47drones, the pill packages. I can continue.
07:50Exactly. We'll see an awful lot about it today. But Minister Zacharias, thank you very much for joining us on
07:54Euronews.
07:55Back to you in studio, Maeve.
07:56Thank you so much, Shona Murray there. And to your guest, the Minister of Defence for the Netherlands.
08:01And now we can head to France, where a Paris court is due to decide whether Marine Le Pen can
08:07stand in the 2027 presidential elections.
08:09It's a ruling with potentially far-reaching political consequences and one being watched very closely here in Brussels as she
08:15stands accused of misusing EU funds.
08:18For more, we're joined in the studio by our French correspondent, Maya de la Boeum.
08:21So it's a big day for Marine Le Pen. Just remind us, what is at stake and what does this
08:26mean for her political career?
08:27Yes, Maeve, it's a big day for France today. We will know if Marine Le Pen can run in the
08:34next presidential election in 2027, so a year from now.
08:38And so today is really the verdict from an appeals court that will confirm a sentence that has already been
08:47imposed on her in 2025.
08:48If you remember, Marine Le Pen was sentenced to four years in prison, to a 100,000 euro fine, and
08:55most importantly, to a ban for her to hold public office for five years, which means she couldn't run.
09:02So Marine Le Pen, what she did is she appealed this verdict.
09:05And now this Paris court, this appeal court, is supposed to confirm or not this verdict.
09:11And we will know today at 1.30 if Marine Le Pen can run in this presidential election.
09:17The sentence is linked to a case of embezzlement of EU funds.
09:21And if the decision goes against her, we know Jordan Bardella is waiting in the wings, right?
09:25Absolutely.
09:26This, if the verdict confirms that Marine Le Pen cannot run for the next presidential election,
09:31it really opens the way for Jordan Bardella, who is Marine Le Pen's political heir, or his protégé, let's say,
09:38who is very well positioned right now to really enter the race.
09:43And he's a very successful candidate.
09:45We have seen him very high in the polls.
09:48He's even, according to the latest poll, is having a slight lead over Marine Le Pen.
09:54He is seen clearly as the natural heir.
09:58But the problem is he's also seen as a very young candidate.
10:01He's only 30 years old, and he's still very inexperienced.
10:05And this, by contrast, Marine Le Pen is clearly, you know, we've seen her, as you said,
10:10entering the race three times.
10:12She's very experienced.
10:13She has been in politics for many, many years.
10:16She has taken the lead over the party since 2011.
10:19So she is the natural candidate.
10:21But we will see in the days to come, because we know this is imminent,
10:26that Jordan Bardella will probably announce his candidacy very soon.
10:30OK, all eyes on that hearing.
10:31The verdict will be read out at 1.30 central European time.
10:34Maida Le Boom, thank you so much for that.
10:36But now, moving on with the summer holiday season officially underway,
10:40the European Commission is scrambling to ensure the EU's new entry-exit system
10:44doesn't cause chaos at European airports.
10:48Ariakopianos takes a look at the latest Brussels headache.
10:52If you hold a non-EU passport, Brussels has a brand-new welcome package
10:56for your next European summer holiday.
10:58The biometric entry-exit system was designed to log your face and fingerprints
11:03in around 70 seconds to catch over stairs.
11:06But try telling that to traveling families trapped in a sweating airport terminal.
11:11And as the holiday season peaks, the grand vision of smart EU borders
11:15has collided with a physical breakdown, risking the travel plans of millions.
11:19So welcome to the premium queuing experience.
11:25The automated network is now live across 29 European nations.
11:29And since the rollout, the digital net caught 40,000 border refusals
11:34and identified 1,000 security risks.
11:37To Brussels, these figures prove the database works
11:40by instantly flagging visa over stairs and fake documents.
11:44But here goes a problem.
11:46Biometric collection is triggering a systemic operational crisis.
11:50Industry lobbies report waiting times at border control
11:54reaching up to 5 hours during peak periods.
11:57And warn these delays put over 40 million arrivals
12:00and 45 billion dollars of tourist spending at risk.
12:04This bottleneck hits just as European hubs prepared to handle 40 million more passengers
12:09than they did in May and June.
12:12So who's to blame for the chaos?
12:14It looks like national capitals failed to prepare.
12:18Many airports lack border guards, digital kiosks and basic infrastructure.
12:22And the rollout is a fragmented mess
12:24because some capitals bought the equipment
12:26while others struggled to do so.
12:29And the EU system forces guards to collect fingerprints
12:32from every first-time arrival,
12:34which in turn creates an instant dead stop at the gates.
12:38The European border agency Frontex admits
12:40the chaotic biometric registration
12:42could take up to two years to stabilize.
12:45But hey, look at the bright side.
12:48You now have roughly 700 days to practice your queuing technique
12:52and even enough time to learn a local language.
12:59Now, moving on, the ongoing conflict in the Middle East
13:02and a potential sell-off in US assets
13:04are the two biggest risks facing the eurozone economy.
13:07That's according to fresh analysis
13:09from the European Stability Mechanism,
13:11which warns the shocks could tip the euro area into recession
13:14and push inflation as high as 5%.
13:17The Luxembourg-based institution was set up
13:20in the wake of the Greek debt crisis
13:21to provide financial support to eurozone countries
13:24in times of distress.
13:26For more, we're joined now by the ESM's Chief Economist,
13:28that's Wolf Strauch.
13:30Good morning. Great to have you with us.
13:31Good morning, Maeve.
13:32So this is quite a gloomy outlook you're presenting here.
13:35Tell us more about your findings.
13:37From the perspective of the European Stability Mechanism,
13:40euro area resilience is coming under strain.
13:43And we see on the one hand
13:44that geoeconomic and geopolitical risks are rising
13:47and you have security threats,
13:50you have energy price disruption,
13:52you have financial market volatility
13:53and fragmentation in the trading system.
13:56And on the other hand,
13:58you see that this leads to higher demands on governments
14:01while the fiscal space is shrinking.
14:03And that is what we mean when resilience is coming under strain.
14:08Governments need to create fiscal buffers
14:09and they need to create growth.
14:11So many of our viewers would be worried this morning
14:14about this risk of a potential recession.
14:16How high is it?
14:18The point is, as a crisis resolution mechanism,
14:21you ask what happens if things go wrong,
14:23not what will actually happen.
14:25When you ask the second question,
14:27what will happen?
14:28You do a forecast.
14:29We do a scenario analysis.
14:30And as you said before,
14:32if we have two shocks,
14:33a meltdown of US assets
14:35and a re-escalation of a conflict,
14:37yes, then the risk is high
14:39that we will have a recession.
14:40And that is what we point out
14:41in order to be prepared for a crisis,
14:44not because we are predicting the crisis.
14:46And is the eurozone stronger now than it was
14:48forming these potential kind of shocks?
14:51The shocks that we will maybe seeing
14:53is indeed the Middle East conflict.
14:56And that leads to higher energy prices
14:58and uncertainty.
14:59And on the other hand,
15:01a meltdown in US assets
15:02that would imply that
15:03we have to face tighter financial conditions.
15:06So what should consumers be doing
15:08and thinking now?
15:09We think that governments
15:11mainly should be prepared.
15:13And that means that
15:14they have to get growth going.
15:16And that will help also the consumers.
15:18And just finally today in Ankara,
15:20billions are being pledged for defence.
15:22Can European countries afford this?
15:24Well, European countries could create
15:26a win-win situation here.
15:29And we have looked in depth
15:30into the defence spending.
15:32And when you actually create a situation
15:34where defence spending spills over
15:36into the civilian economy,
15:38then you can recover 53 cent
15:40for each additional euro spent
15:41through taxes and higher growth.
15:44Okay.
15:45Vos Traug, Chief Economist
15:47at the European Stability Mechanism.
15:48Thank you so much for coming in to us
15:49and being our guest.
15:51But now it is time
15:52for the FIFA World Cup segment.
15:59Well, a very late goal from Spain
16:01ended Portugal's 2026 World Cup rodeo
16:04and could also mark the end
16:05of Cristiano Ronaldo's
16:06remarkable international career.
16:08The superstar had tears in his eyes
16:11at the final whistle
16:12as he came to terms
16:13with the sobering consequences
16:14of this defeat.
16:16And meanwhile, all eyes, of course,
16:18were really on the controversy-riddled match
16:20of the US against Belgium.
16:22The Red Devils,
16:23as I'm sure you've seen,
16:24prevailed in a convincing 4-1 victory,
16:26taking to social media as well
16:28to suggest you cannot overturn this.
16:30That was a blatant message
16:31to President Donald Trump,
16:33who'd called the FIFA president previously
16:34to allow for the top US striker,
16:37Foller and Billigan,
16:37to play that game.
16:38Let's take a listen to Donald Trump
16:40before the game.
16:40Yes, I asked for a review by FIFA.
16:44I spoke to a man who's highly respected.
16:47I asked for a review
16:48because I didn't think it was a foul.
16:50And, you know, again,
16:51I'm good at this stuff.
16:52I didn't think it was a foul.
16:53I thought it was two great athletes
16:55that crashed into each other
16:56and got entangled.
16:57That was not a guy
16:59punching somebody in the face
17:00or anything that, you know,
17:02would be different.
17:02Now, in the end,
17:03Foller and Billigan played
17:04but did not score.
17:06But the decision to exempt
17:07the US striker from the one-match ban
17:09after his red card
17:10against Bosnia-Herzegovina
17:11did create an international outcry
17:13from the European Football Association,
17:15UEFA,
17:15and also the EU Commissioner for Sports,
17:17Glenn Michalif.
17:18For an expert view,
17:19we spoke to William Galliarch,
17:21the former UEFA president-advisor.
17:23It's completely against the rules
17:25and the status of FIFA,
17:28not only because there is
17:31obvious political interference
17:33in the decision
17:34that should have been made
17:36by an independent body
17:38within FIFA,
17:39and that is quite a scandal,
17:41frankly,
17:42but also because
17:45it violates
17:48all the rules.
17:49The fact that
17:50FIFA accepts the fact
17:52that
17:53the president of the United States
17:58can
18:00interfere and decide
18:04about the game,
18:05about the tournament,
18:07about the management of FIFA,
18:10is completely unacceptable.
18:11Definitely
18:14the fairness
18:14of this competition
18:16is threatened.
18:18And meanwhile,
18:19tonight,
18:20the final two spots
18:21in the quarterfinals
18:22will be fought out
18:22between Argentina
18:23and Egypt
18:24and also Switzerland
18:25against Colombia.
18:26Enjoy the games
18:27because that does bring
18:28this edition of
18:30Europe Today to an end.
18:31Thank you so much
18:31for your company.
18:32As always,
18:33if you have any views
18:34on any of the stories
18:35we're covering for you here,
18:36europetoday
18:37at yournews.com,
18:38that is our email address.
18:39Thank you so much
18:40for tuning in.
18:41Have a lovely morning
18:42and see you very soon
18:43on Euronews.
18:44and see you very soon.
19:11I think everyone
19:24Musik
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