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Trump Threatens to Cut Trade With Spain

U.S. President Donald Trump said the U.S. would cut off all trade with Spain after Madrid denied access to its bases for Iran strikes and resisted his call for NATO allies to spend 5% of GDP on defense, escalating tensions within the alliance.

March 03, 2026Clash Report

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U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to end all U.S. trade with Spain after Madrid said it would not allow the United States to use its bases in connection with strikes on Iran. The dispute links operational military access to economic retaliation, introducing trade as a tool in alliance management.

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Trump framed Spain’s refusal as inconsequential to U.S. operational freedom. “Spain told us that we can't use their bases and that is alright we don't need them,” he said. He added: “If we want, we can just fly in and use it. Nobody is going to tell us not to use it.” The comments suggest Washington views basing constraints as surmountable, even as they carry diplomatic costs within NATO.

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The president went further, directing his criticism toward Spain’s broader posture within the alliance. “Spain has been terrible,” Trump said. “I told Bessent to cut off all dealings with Spain.” He also declared: “So we're going to cut off all trade with Spain. We don't want anything to do with Spain.” The remarks explicitly connect military cooperation, trade relations, and internal alliance burden-sharing debates.

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A central point of friction is defense spending. Trump has demanded that NATO allies increase military outlays to 5% of gross domestic product. Spain, he said, has resisted that benchmark. The 5% figure represents a substantial escalation from existing alliance spending debates and places Madrid among those publicly criticized for falling short of Washington’s expectations.