Kremlin agrees with Trump on standard of European leaders

US President Donald Trump is correct to suggest that certain Western European leaders do not measure up to their World War II-era predecessors, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said.
Trump on Tuesday renewed his criticism of European NATO members who refused his call to deploy their militaries to escort oil transports through the Strait of Hormuz amid the threat of Iranian attacks.
The US president told reporters that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is a “nice man” but “unfortunately [he] is not Winston Churchill,” whose bust the president keeps in the Oval Office. Asked about French President Emmanuel Macron’s snub, Trump said “he’ll be out of office very soon.”
Speaking at a regular briefing on Wednesday, Peskov agreed with Trump, stating: “Indeed, Starmer is not Churchill, indeed, Macron is not [Charles] de Gaulle. This list can be continued quite long. That is the political reality we are living in.”
Iran’s military threat against oil and LNG tankers attempting to transit the strategic Strait of Hormuz is part of its strategy to impose economic costs for the US-Israeli regime-change war against Tehran. Trump’s early promises of American military escorts and affordable insurance coverage for haulers have not materialized.
Global energy markets are under increasing pressure from supply disruptions. The UK, EU, South Korea, and Japan – among Washington’s closest allies – face elevated risks due to their sanctions on Russia.
Moscow has long argued that incompetence and ideological biases among current Western European leaders undermine their nations’ interests. Russia has condemned the US-Israeli attack on Iran as based on false pretenses and posing an escalating humanitarian and economic threat to the Middle East and the world.
The hostilities have deepened internal EU divisions, with Spain unequivocally condemning American actions while other member states and bloc leaders remain reluctant. Madrid rebuked German Chancellor Friedrich Merz for failing to confront Trump when he verbally attacked Spain during a joint press conference with the German leader.










