ΑΞΙΟΠΙΣΤΕΣ, ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΩΜΕΝΕΣ, ΔΟΚΙΜΑΣΜΕΝΕΣ ΣΤΟ ΧΡΟΝΟ ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΑΝΤΙΚΕΙΜΕΝΙΚΟΤΗΤΑ ΤΟΥΣ ειδήσεις...ΓΙΑ ΟΣΑ ΣΥΜΒΑΙΝΟΥΝ ΣΤΟΝ ΔΗΜΟ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ!

Toπικό Μέσο Μαζικής ενημέρωσης ("θυγατρικό" της "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"),ΜΙΑ ΚΡΑΥΓΗ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ 170.000 Ελλήνων Πολιτών. Είκοσι πέντε ολόκληρα χρόνια ζωής (2000-2025) και αγώνων στην καταγραφή και υπεράσπιση της Αλήθειας για τον πολύπαθο τόπο των Αχαρνών.

2000 - 2025

2000-2025 - ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΠΕΝΤΕ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ...ΟΥΤΕ ΜΙΑ ΔΙΑΨΕΥΣΙΣ!!

"ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2025"

Διαβάζετε ένα ΑΠΟΛΥΤΩΣ ΑΞΙΟΠΙΣΤΟ και ΧΩΡΙΣ ΚΑΜΙΑ ΑΠΟΛΥΤΩΣ οικονομική στήριξη (αυτοδιοικητική, χορηγική, δημοσία ή άλλη ) ηλικίας 25 ετών Μέσο Μαζικής Ενημέρωσης, με αξιοσημείωτη ΔΙΕΘΝΗ αναγνώριση και ΕΞΑΙΡΕΤΙΚΑ ΥΨΗΛΗ ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΙΜΟΤΗΤΑ.
Είκοσι πέντε (25) ολόκληρα χρόνια δημοσιογραφίας, ΟΥΤΕ ΜΙΑ ΔΙΑΨΕΥΣΙΣ!!
Contact: politikimx@gmail.com v.ch.maria@gmail.com
Ενδεικτική αναφορά αναγνωσιμότητος είναι:
76762 (Ioυλιος 2025..λέει η γκούγκλ)
80410 (Aύγουστος 2025..είπαμε.."λέει η γκούγκλ”)
87122 (Οκτώβριος 2025) 
104589 (Νοέμβριος 2025) 

Αναζήτηση αυτού του ιστολογίου

ΕΜΠΡΑΚΤΗ ΣΥΜΠΑΡΑΣΤΑΣΗ ΣΤΑ ΑΔΕΛΦΙΑ ΜΑΣ....-"ΜΑΚΕΔΟΝΙΑ" Ειδήσεις..- Ανακοίνωση του Γραφείου Τύπου της Νέας Δημοκρατίας..-Δωρεάν φάρμακα για την παχυσαρκία.....-INTERNATIONAL LEATHER MAKER,update..-American Apparel & Footwear Association:update..-WorldFootwear:update..-"TO BHMA" Ειδήσεις..-"ΜΑΚΕΔΟΝΙΑ" Ειδήσεις..-MAΡΙΑΣ ΑΝΑΡΤΗΣΕΙΣ ΣΤΑ SOCIAL MEDIA..-Συζήτηση του Πρωθυπουργού Κυριάκου Μητσοτάκη με τον εκδότη της εφημερίδας «Το Βήμα» Γιάννη Πρετεντέρη, στο πλαίσιο του συνεδρίου «Athens Policy Dialogues»..-ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗΣ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΕΩΣ ενημέρωση απο τον Κυβερνητικό Εκπρόσωπο κ. ΠΑΥΛΟ ΜΑΡΙΝΑΚΗ..-ΒΑΣΙΛΗ ΚΙΚΙΛΙΑ,ΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΥ ΝΑΥΤΙΛΙΑΣ,πρόσφατη δραστηριότητα..-ΝΙΚΟΛΑΟΣ ΔΕΝΔΙΑΣ,ΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΣ ΕΘΝΙΚΗΣ ΑΜΥΝΗΣ:ΟΜΙΛΙΑ ΣΤΗΝ ΤΑΚΤΙΚΗ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΑΣΗ ΕΒΕΑ..-ΚΩΣΤΗΣ ΧΑΤΖΗΔΑΚΗΣ,ΑΝΤΙΠΡΟΕΔΡΟΣ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗΣ ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΣΕΩΣ:"Επτά άξονες στήριξης της βιομηχανίας"..-ΛΕΣΧΗ ΣΥΖΗΤΗΣΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΑΝΤΑΛΛΑΓΗΣ ΑΠΟΨΕΩΝ ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΩΝ ΔΗΜΟΤΩΝ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ..-ΦΩΤΕΙΝΟΙ ΔΗΜΟΤΕΣ ΑΧΑΡΝΩΝ/ΕΛΕΝΗ ΜΟΥΣΙΟΥ.....-SPD update..-DASSANA'S VEG RECIPES..-U.S. National Science Foundation Update ..-Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau: newsletter TTB..-Federal Reserve Board Notification,update..-Ομιλία Νίκου Ανδρουλάκη, Προέδρου ΠΑΣΟΚ-Κινήματος Αλλαγής στην εκδήλωση για το κυκλοφοριακό πρόβλημα στο λεκανοπέδιο..-"ΠΛΕΥΣΗ ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΙΑΣ" ενημέρωση..-EUROPEAN BANK's update..-The European Data Portal:Newsletter - December 2025..-COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,update..-Ιστορικό-Εικαστικό Αφιέρωμα «Χριστιανική Τέχνη"..-WTO update..-NATO update..-Η «μικρή σχεδία» σε νέα ταξίδια ..-Ομιλία του Πρωθυπουργού Κυριάκου Μητσοτάκη στην εκδήλωση του Υπουργείου Δικαιοσύνης ..-Delphi Economic Forum :A Growing Global Network: 26 Partners Already Confirmed for DEF XI..-ΕΘΝΙΚΗ ΑΡΧΗ ΔΙΑΦΑΝΕΙΑΣ ενημέρωση..-ΕΒΕΑ ενημέρωση..-ΕΠΙΧΕΙΡΗΜΑΤΙΚΗ ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΣΗ ΑΠΟ ΤΟ ΥΠΟΥΡΓΕΙΟ ΕΞΩΤΕΡΙΚΩΝ..-NSF latest news..-ΤΕΛΟΣ ΕΠΟΧΗΣ ΓΙΑ ΤΑ ΤΡΟΛΛΕΫ....-Prime Minister Carney.....-U.S. Department of State Weekly Digest Bulletin..-"ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΣ" Ειδήσεις..-"ΤΟ ΒΗΜΑ" Ειδήσεις..-Ε.Ε.Φα.Μ. Newsletter ..-NORWAY's latest..-ΜΕΓΑΛΟΙ ΚΙΝΔΥΝΟΙ ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΥΓΕΙΑ..-ΑΣΕΠ νέα..-QUORA TOP STORIES FOR MARIA....-EUROGROUP,COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,update..- ΙΩΑΝΝΟΥ Γ. ΒΑΒΟΥΡΑΝΑΚΗ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΟΣ ΣΧΟΛΙΑΣΜΟΣ:"..χωρίς αιδώ...αλλά..ΕΩΣ ΕΔΩ!"..-ΕΘΝΙΚΗ ΑΡΧΗ ΔΙΑΦΑΝΕΙΑΣ:πρόσκλησις..-Αρχαιολόγοι ταυτοποίησαν τη μούμια του φαραώ Σεσόνκ Γ΄..-International Monetary Fund:weekend read..-IMF Blog,update..-Ινστιτούτο Prolepsis:Παγκόσμια Ημέρα Εθελοντισμού..-Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:The 2023 PLACES Data Are Now Live!..-"ΤΟ ΒΗΜΑ" Ειδήσεις..-"ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΣ" Ειδήσεις..-55η ΕΤΗΣΙΑ ΤΑΚΤΙΚΗ ΓΕΝΙΚΗ ΣΥΝΕΛΕΥΣΗ ΕΞΑ ..-EUROPEAN PUBLIC PROSECUTOR's OFFICE,ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ:update..-ΟΒΑΜΑ's news..-"ΝΟΜΙΚΗ ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ" NEWSLETTER..-Χαιρετισμός του Πρωθυπουργού και Προέδρου της Νέας Δημοκρατίας Κυριάκου Μητσοτάκη σε συγκέντρωση πολιτών στο Μαρκόπουλο..-Ο ΠΡΩΘΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΣ συναντά σήμερα πολίτες στο Μαρκόπουλο..- Δραστηριότητες του Προξενείου της Κύπρου στη Μασσαλία (2025)...-ΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΥ ΠΙΕΡΡΑΚΑΚΗ,ΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΥ ΕΘΝΙΚΗΣ ΟΙΚΟΝΟΜΙΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΟΙΚΟΝΟΜΙΚΩΝ,newsletter..-"ΠΑΠΑΣΤΡΑΤΟΣ ΜΑΖΙ",ενημέρωση..-ΕΘΝΙΚΗ ΑΡΧΗ ΔΙΑΦΑΝΕΙΑΣ ενημέρωση..-EUROPEAN PUBLIC PROSECUTOR's OFFICE,ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ,update..-ΑΠΟΤΕΛΕΣΜΑΤΑ ΑΡΧΑΙΡΕΣΙΩΝ ΣΤΟ ΚΙΝΗΜΑ ΣΥΝΤΑΞΙΟΥΧΩΝ ..-ΒΑΤΑ SHOE MUSEUM,update..-ΚΥΡΙΑΚΟΥ ΜΗΤΣΟΤΑΚΗ,ΠΡΩΘΥΠΟΥΡΓΟΥ ΤΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ, πρόσφατη ενημέρωση..-IMF COUNTRY FOCUS:GHANA..-55η Ετήσια Τακτική Γενική Συνέλευση της ΕΞΑ..-Τέσσερις υποψήφιοι διάδοχοι της Λάουρα Κοβέσι..-Επίσημη έναρξη για το Συνέδριο του Βήματος με θέμα την Ανατολική Μεσόγειο ..- --

ΝΙΚΟΛΑΟΥ ΜΕΣΟΓΑΙΑΣ,ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΙΤΟΥ, Συνέντευξις που πρέπει να παρακολουθήσουμε ΟΛΟΙ

MHN ΞΕΧΝΑΤΕ ΝΑ ΔΙΑΒΑΖΕΤΕ ΚΑΙ ΕΔΩ:

SELECT LANGUAGE


6/12/2025 ώρα 10.13', 1.622 ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΕΙΣ.Παρέμβαση counter το μετατρέπει σε ...984 (!!!) ώρα 10.13'
Η "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 2000-2025" πολεμιέται απο της γέννησής της.Αντί να εξαφανιστεί, μετετράπει στον χειρότερο εφιάλτη των δολοφόνων της-πάσης..προέλευσης-με μια πρωτόφαντη αναγνωσιμότητα εξαίρετα νοημόνων Αναγνωστών οι οποίοι την στήριξαν και την στηρίζουν ως ΜΕΣΟΝ ΔΙΑΦΟΡΦΩΣΗ ΓΝΩΜΗΣ.
Είναι ένα Μέσο τόσο ειλικρινές, ανιδιοτελές και ΕΝΤΙΜΟ που αποδεικνύει περιτράνως εδώ και ένα τέταρτο αιώνα πως "ΟΙ ΑΞΙΕΣ ΠΟΤΕ ΔΕΝ ΧΑΝΟΝΤΑΙ".
Η τεχνογνωσία και η προσφορά ψυχής...ΔΕΝ ΠΟΛΕΜΙΕΤΑΙ.
Που θα πάει;;Θα το εμπεδώσετε αλλά καταλαβαίνω: μέχρι να κάνει το ερέθισμα την διαδρομή αυτιού-ματιού-κέντρο εγκεφάλου σας..ΧΡΕΙΑΖΟΝΤΑΙ ΚΑΙ ΚΑΠΟΙΑ...ΧΡΟΝΙΑ!!!(ζητήστε να σας..το μεταφράσει ένας αναγνώστης μας γιατί είμαι βεβαία πως ΔΕΝ ΜΠΟΡΕΙΤΕ ΝΑ ΑΝΤΙΛΗΦΘΕΙΤΕ Τ Ι Ε Ν Ν Ο Ω στην τελευταία μου παράγραφο!!) "ΠΕΡΑΣΤΙΚΑ ΣΑΣ..."

ΣΤΟΧΕΥΜΕΝΗ ΑΝΑΦΟΡΑ ΜΕΙΩΣΗΣ ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΙΜΟΤΗΤΟΣ

6/12/2025 ώρα 10.13', 1.622 ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΕΙΣ.Παρέμβαση counter το μετατρέπει σε ...984 (!!!) ώρα 10.13'

ΕΜΠΡΑΚΤΗ ΣΥΜΠΑΡΑΣΤΑΣΗ ΣΤΑ ΑΔΕΛΦΙΑ ΜΑΣ

Μια αδελφική ΠΑΡΑΙΝΕΣΗ:Βοηθήστε τους Αγρότες με δύο τρόπους:ένα μπιτόνι ΠΕΤΡΕΛΑΙΟ για ένα τρακτέρ ή δέκα σαντουϊτς (αν και αυτοί είναι ΟΛΟΙ ΝΟΙΚΟΚΥΡΗΔΕΣ και δεν το έχουν ανάγκη) είναι η συμμετοχή όσων δεν μπορούμε να είμαστε μαζί τους στα μπλόκα.Είναι η ΔΙΚΗ ΜΑΣ φτωχή ΣΥΜΠΑΡΑΣΤΑΣΗ χωρίς λόγια...αλλά με έργα. ΕΡΓΑ μόνο ΕΜΕΙΣ ΟΙ ΦΤΩΧΟΙ ΕΛΛΗΝΕΣ μπορούμε να ΠΡΑΤΤΟΥΜΕ. ΣΥΜΠΑΡΑΣΤΑΣΗ ΣΤΑ ΑΔΕΛΦΙΑ ΜΑΣ....

Κυριακή 29 Ιουνίου 2025

U.S. Department of State,Weekly Digest Bulletin





Luxembourg National Day
06/23/2025

Luxembourg National Day
06/23/2025 12:01 AM EDT

Marco Rubio, Secretary of State
HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Luxembourg National Day
hide

Luxembourg National Day

Press Statement
June 23, 2025

Congratulations to the people of Luxembourg as you celebrate the Grand Duke’s birthday. Today we acknowledge the shared sacrifice of our people during World War II and remember the liberation of Luxembourg in 1944 from German occupation. We also celebrate our trade and investment ties, which fuel job growth and economic opportunities in both our countries. Luxembourg’s decision to spend more on national defense strengthens our NATO Alliance for future generations. On behalf of the people of the United States of America, may this Luxembourg National Day be a joyous celebration filled with peace and prosperity.

Tags
Bilateral Relations and Engagement Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Luxembourg Office of the Spokesperson

Digital Press Briefing: U.S. Permanent Representative to NATO Ambassador Matthew Whitaker
06/23/2025
Digital Press Briefing: U.S. Permanent Representative to NATO Ambassador Matthew Whitaker
06/23/2025 11:05 AM EDT
The Brussels Hub

QUESTION: Good morning from the State Department’s Brussels Media Hub. I would like to welcome everyone joining us for today’s virtual press briefing. Today we are very honored to be joined by the – to be joined by Ambassador Matthew Whitaker, U.S. Permanent Representative to NATO. The ambassador is joining us from The Hague, where he has an incredibly busy schedule today. We will try to get to as many of the numerous questions submitted as possible in the short time we have today. Today’s briefing is on the record, and let’s get started.

Ambassador, thank you so much for joining us today. I’ll turn it over to you for your opening remarks.

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Thank you. Before I begin, I want to welcome Bridget, who is our new hub director. As you know, we were supposed to do this call on Friday with John, so I did not have an opportunity to congratulate him on completing his tour. So John, wherever you are, thank you for your service in Brussels, and welcome, Bridget.

So good afternoon, everyone. Starting tomorrow, NATO leaders from all 32 Allies will gather in The Hague for a summit that marks a major milestone for our Alliance. The summit will be historic. This summit is really about NATO’s credibility, and we are urging all of our Allies to step up to the plate and pay their fair share for transatlantic security.

Thanks to the bold leadership of President Donald J. Trump, NATO is on track to achieve a historic commitment – each Ally pledging to spend at least 5 percent of their GDP on defense. This commitment is more than just a number; it represents a renewal of NATO’s relevance, a rebalancing of the burden for our collective defense, and a clear signal that the Alliance stands united against today’s security challenges, from Russian aggression to emerging threats in cyber and space.

The 5 percent commitment is the single most important step NATO can take to ensure it remains strong and ready for the future. But this commitment is just the beginning. NATO is not only about defense; it is a powerful engine for prosperity and innovation. Our shared investments help sustain and grow industries that support good-paying jobs, foster technological advancement, and build resilient supply chains across the Atlantic.

American innovation plays a key role in this partnership. The U.S. is a global leader in software, AI, and autonomous systems – the technologies shaping the future of defense. But we know innovation alone isn’t enough either. We must work together to remove barriers, streamline acquisition, and deepen multinational cooperation so we can rapidly field cutting-edge capabilities that keep the Alliance ahead of any threat.

So as we prepare for the summit, we do so with confidence. The commitments we make here will drive stronger defense, greater prosperity, and a more secure future for all NATO Allies and the 1 billion citizens that live within our territories.

So thank you and I look forward to your questions.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. We will now turn to the question-and-answer portion of today’s briefing. Our first question is from Alexander Bakker from De Telegraaf in the Netherlands, and the question is: “It’s always special when the American president visits our country. Will he visit other locations in the Netherlands beyond The Hague? Also, how does the United States view the Netherlands’ role within NATO?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Well, thank you, and since I’m sitting here in your beautiful country in The Hague today, I just have to say that we have a strong relationship with our Dutch partners and friends and they’ve been wonderful hosts so far. Obviously this is a big production to get 32 world leaders in one city, and security is going to be strong and the Dutch have really responded. And at NATO, I guess as part of your question, the Dutch are a super important Ally, having met their obligations and they’ve becoming a leading voice in getting the Alliance to increase their defense investments.

And as we see increased defense spending, the Dutch tech sector opens a world of opportunities to showcase innovation and it kind of – I have to say it because I work with them on a daily basis, but obviously Mark Rutte, who is our secretary general, being a Dutchman is a very critical part of this Alliance as well.

So the Netherlands is, I think, really the heart and soul of this Alliance along with our 31 Allies that are all pulling in the same direction as we head into this summit here in The Hague.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Our second question is from Kysia Hekster from NOS in the Netherlands, and the question is: “Will the United States support language in the communique identifying Russia as the main threat to the Alliance?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Well, thanks for your question. Negotiations regarding the communique are still underway, so I’m not going to be able to comment directly on the specific language. But as I said during our last hub call, I fully expect that the summit statement will be direct, to the point, and reflect the Allies’ current threat assessment and the need for collective defense and the individual defense of all Allies. But it is undeniable the reason we are so focused on increasing defense investment to 5 percent is because of Russia and the long-term threat Russia poses to NATO’s security.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. We have two questions that are focused on timelines. So the first is from Bibiana Piene from NTB in Norway, and Bibiana’s question is: “What is the U.S. position regarding the timeline for Allies to achieve the 5 percent defense spending target?” And another similar question came in from Bruno Waterfield from The Times in Belgium, and Bruno’s question is: “What should the deadline for the 5 percent target be: 2032 or 2035? What is your response to countries such as the United Kingdom that prefer a later date?” Thank you, Ambassador.

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Yeah. Well, both great questions, and this has obviously been a critical discussion point as we’ve been trying to get an agreement among all 32 Allies. And the timeline, quite frankly, is as soon as practical. Our adversaries have a vote here, and so we have to balance a sense of urgency with what’s realistic. President Trump has called on all Allies to increase their defense spending because he understands the threats we face. Allies will need to show meaningful progress on increasing their defense budgets to meet the challenge.

There’s no – there’s not an unlimited timeframe here. Our adversaries will not wait for us to be ready. And so we would expect meaningful and credible growth from Allies in their defense budgets year on year. We must be prepared to deter any threats or challenges to make sure that our deterrence and defense is strong and we have peace through strength.

We also recognize that it will take time for our defense industry to turn this increased spending into real capabilities. We are working with our industry partners to undertake this transformational moment.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Our next question is from Henry Foy here in Belgium, who’s with the Financial Times, and Henry’s question is: “How does President Trump intend to ensure that other leaders follow through on the 5 percent defense spending commitment? How will the United States prevent this from becoming another – an empty promise?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Well, first and foremost, Allies submit – will submit regular reports on defense spending so we can all track each other’s progress and hold each other to account. NATO also regularly reviews our military requirements and readiness levels, and we have successfully used these tools over the past years to press Allies to reach the old 2 percent commitment. With the stakes even higher now, I would expect Allies to be even more vigilant in holding each other accountable for year-on-year progress, and certainly it will be at the top of the U.S. agenda with NATO Allies in the coming years.

This – I just want to say this historic moment in the Alliance is going to require all 32 Allies committed to doing more, to really making sure that Europe, the transatlantic security area, including the United States and Canada, is strong and ready for the next fight. And as I mentioned previously, adversaries – whether it’s Russia or whether it is the Chinese, the Iranians, or the North Koreans, or anyone that wants to threaten our values and our way of life – is going to have to understand that NATO is serious, that we are investing every single year to get stronger, and that strength is what is going to ensure peace for generations to come.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Our next question is from Kjeld Neubert, also here in Belgium, from Euractiv, and the question is: “From the United States perspective, what should be included under the 1.5 percent in defense-related spending?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: It’s a great question. And remember, this 5 percent does have two components. It has a 3.5 percent component that is hardcore defense – tanks, airplanes, battleships – but the – then there’s also 1.5 of defense-related spending. And it’s – again, as I mentioned on previous hub calls, this is not a grab bag that everybody can just throw additional spending into, but it’s crucial things like infrastructure that enables military mobility. We can have the best tanks in the world – and we do. I was in Ohio, where I saw the General Dynamics plant in Lima, Ohio, where those tanks are rolling off, the Abrams tanks. But if you can’t get those tanks to the front lines because of the roads or bridges or rail can’t handle those tanks and their weight, then obviously they’re worthless not being deployed to the front.

Additionally, the 1.5 percent of the overall 5 percent enables Allies to face the realities of a ever-evolving and changing security environment. For example, as we see more challenges in the cyber domain and hybrid threats, increased spending on resilience and cybersecurity will be crucial. Because as I mentioned I think on the last hub call, the first shot of the next war will be a cyber attack, or an attack on critical infrastructure. It won’t be a tank rolling across someone’s border on the – of NATO.

And finally, we need to invest significantly in our industrial bases across the Alliance. Without more production capacity, we will not be able to turn increased spending into real capabilities.

MODERATOR: Thank you very much, Ambassador. Our next question is from Evaldas Labanauskas, also here in Belgium, from IQ magazine. And the question is: “Lithuania and other eastern flank countries are calling for the Hague investment plan to be implemented by 2030. What is the U.S. position on the timeline?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Yeah, well, our Allies on the eastern flank understand better than anyone that our adversaries – for example, especially Russia – have a vote in their ability to reconstitute in a short timeframe, whether that’s two or five years from now, after their – as a ceasefire or a peace in Ukraine is going to certainly drive this timeline. President Trump is pushing for a clear, credible plan to reach 5 percent defense investment across NATO. We can’t repeat the Wales Pledge mistake where spending only spiked late in the decade. And in fact, we’re in year 11 right now and some countries are finally getting to that. For example, Canada is finally saying that maybe they’ll do 2 percent next year. I mean, that is what we’re trying to avoid here with this new commitment.

And so Allies must boost their defense budget significantly and quickly. This urgency isn’t coming from the United States. It isn’t coming from Secretary General Rutte. It’s driven by the growing threats we face and the rapid pace of our adversaries’ preparations for potential conflict.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Next question is from Thomas Gutschker from F.A.Z. in Germany. Thomas’ question is: “When will the United States conclude its global posture review? Will President Trump commit to synchronizing any future U.S. troop drawdowns in Europe with increased European defense capabilities?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: We expect that the Pentagon’s review will be completed late summer or early fall, but I would defer specific questions on the rollout to our friends at the Defense Department, in the Pentagon. At NATO, we will work closely with the Pentagon and with our Allies to address the impact of any decisions. These sorts of consultations are what NATO does every day, year-round. And so we will work hand in glove with our European and Canadian Allies to make sure that there is no security gaps in the defense capabilities; to the extent that any are moved out by the U.S. of anywhere, that those will be replaced and ensured to be completed in an orderly and organized fashion.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. We have several questions that were all grouped together here for you. The first is from Gabriel Dominguez from The Japan Times, and another is from a colleague also from The Japan Times. The first question is: “Washington has urged Indo-Pacific partners to increase defense spending to 5 percent of GDP but without a clear timeline. Will the United States ask the IP4 countries to adopt a similar timeline as NATO Allies?” And then the similar question is: “Do you expect to raise the issue of increased defense spending with the IP4 nations during the NATO summit?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Well, we look forward to meeting with our Indo-Pacific partners here in The Hague, who are some of our most likeminded and capable NATO partners. And with defense-industrial cooperation, resilient supply chains, threat assessments, they continue to be key areas that we have and will engage on. Strong allies are capable allies. We are closely coordinating with our allies in the Indo-Pacific to ensure they, too, are stepping up with their investments in the immediate term to deter and defend against our adversaries. But you saw at the Shangri-La Dialogues, where Secretary Hegseth did suggest that they – that our Indo-Pacific partners and our allies in the Indo-Pacific need to get on a similar trajectory as our European and Canadian allies to dramatically increase spending, to ensure that the capability needed to fight the next war are obtained as quickly as possible, and to make sure that we are strong as an alliance and as allies.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Our next question is from Oskar Gorzynski from the Polish Press Agency in Poland, and the question is: “Do you still believe that Russia is negotiating in good faith regarding the war in Ukraine? If so, why, given its continued bombing campaign and refusal to drop maximalist demands?”

AMBASSADOR WHITAKER: Yeah, so this is – I’m going to – I’m going to have to do this as the last question. I’m kind of running out of time, and I need to make a – go to the next event I have scheduled. But to answer your question, Oskar, first of all, I want to join a lot of voices – both from the United States and worldwide – condemning Russia’s strikes on civilians and extend our deepest condolences to the victims and to the families of all those effected, including an American who was recently killed in a Russian strike on Kyiv. There’s no military solution to the Russia-Ukraine war, and a diplomatic solution is necessary. The President supports any diplomatic mechanism that leads to a durable and lasting peace.

President Trump has stated that he is very disappointed at people being killed in the middle of negotiations. We are calling for restraint and urge both parties to avoid escalation. We are engaged at the highest levels and continue to support direct talks between Russia and Ukraine. Constructive, good-faith dialogue is the only path to ending this war. Like President Trump said to President Putin, we expect both Russia and Ukraine to come to the table with clear terms and a willingness to compromise.

I just want to thank everybody again for the time. Sorry that I’m going to have to conclude this session. And I’ll turn it back to you, Bridget, who has – you’ve done an incredible job hosting your first hub call.

MODERATOR: Thank you, Ambassador. Thank you so much for squeezing us into your very busy schedule. Thank you for answering these questions. Thank you to our journalists for your questions and for your participation. Shortly, we’ll send the audio recording of the briefing to all of the participants and provide a transcript. We welcome your feedback. Reach out to us if you have any suggestions for the future. Thank you again for your participation. We look forward to seeing you again for another press briefing soon. And this ends today’s briefing. Thank you.


Senior Official Christensen Travels to the Netherlands
06/23/2025

Senior Official Christensen Travels to the Netherlands
06/23/2025 02:45 PM EDT

Office of the Spokesperson
HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Senior Official Christensen Travels to the Netherlands
hide

Senior Official Christensen Travels to the Netherlands

Media Note

June 23, 2025



Senior Official performing the duties of Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security Brent T. Christensen will travel to the Netherlands from June 23-25.


Senior Official Christensen will attend the NATO Summit Defense Industry Forum (NSDIF), an official side-event of the 2025 NATO Summit. The Senior Official will join plenary sessions focused on strengthening NATO-industry and transatlantic cooperation. He will also meet with American, European, and Indo-Pacific defense industry representatives, and participate in an event sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.


While in The Hague, Senior Official Christensen will also meet with Dutch government officials from the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Defense to discuss bilateral and multilateral security issues.


For more information, please visit the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security.


Tags
Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Bureau of International Organization Affairs Netherlands North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Office of the Spokesperson Official International Travel Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security


Secretary Rubio’s Call with Italian Foreign Minister Tajani
06/24/2025

Secretary Rubio’s Call with Italian Foreign Minister Tajani
06/24/2025 02:05 PM EDT

Office of the Spokesperson
HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Secretary Rubio’s Call with Italian Foreign Minister Tajani
hide

Secretary Rubio’s Call with Italian Foreign Minister Tajani

Readout




June 24, 2025

The below is attributable to Spokesperson Tammy Bruce:

Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke today with Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani regarding events in the Middle East. They agreed Iran can never develop or acquire a nuclear weapon and reviewed next steps to promote a durable peace between Israel and Iran.


Tags
Bilateral Relations and Engagement Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Italy Office of the Spokesperson The Secretary of State


Slovenia Statehood Day
06/25/2025

Slovenia Statehood Day
06/25/2025 12:01 AM EDT



Marco Rubio, Secretary of State
HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Slovenia Statehood Day
hide

Slovenia Statehood Day

Press Statement

June 25, 2025


On behalf of the United States of America, I extend our congratulations to the people of Slovenia as you commemorate your 34th Statehood Day. The United States values Slovenia’s continued contributions to global peace and regional stability. As a NATO Ally, your leadership in the Western Balkans and steadfast support for Euro-Atlantic cooperation reflects a shared understanding that security is preserved through strength, resolve, and unity.

As we deepen our diplomatic and economic ties, including our decades-long energy partnership, the United States remains committed to working with Slovenia and all nations who share our dedication to protecting borders and upholding national sovereignty. Our alliance is built upon the pursuit of peace through our combined strength. We wish the Slovenian people a joyous Statehood Day.


Tags
Bilateral Relations and Engagement Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Office of the Spokesperson The Secretary of State Slovenia


Secretary of State Marco Rubio With Dasha Burns of Politico
06/25/2025

Secretary of State Marco Rubio With Dasha Burns of Politico
06/25/2025 06:19 AM EDT

Marco Rubio, Secretary of State

The Hague, Netherlands
HomeOffice of the SpokespersonPress Releases…Secretary of State Marco Rubio With Dasha Burns of Politico
hide

Secretary of State Marco Rubio With Dasha Burns of Politico

Interview


June 25, 2025


QUESTION: Secretary Rubio, thank you so much for sitting down with me at this critical moment for the nation, the world, and at this historic NATO summit.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, thanks for doing this.

QUESTION: I know you have a very busy day ahead, so I’m going to dive right into it. I want to start with some of the reports overnight. CNN and The New York Times are reporting that early intel suggests Iranian nuclear facilities were not completely destroyed, and The Times is reporting that the nuclear program was only set back a matter of months. Now look, I know it’s obviously quite early. The President is vehemently denying the veracity of these reports. But can you give us, now that we’ve had a little bit of distance, the latest battle damage assessment?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah. Well, I can’t talk to you about intelligence. I can also tell you that intelligence leaks are one of the most frustrating things anywhere, not just because you’ve got somebody who has access to this putting stuff out there, but because it’s so often mischaracterized. An intelligence report, for anyone who’s ever seen it, sometimes is an assessment. Some analyst will make an assessment, or analysts will make an assessment. And in these leaks, what you typically have is someone who read it and then leaks it to the media, giving it the spin and the angle they want it to have because they’ve got some purpose: embarrass the administration, they were against the action, whatever it may be.

Let me tell you this. The Iranian program, the nuclear program today, looks nothing like it did just a week ago. The program today has been set behind significantly from where it was a week ago. It is in far worse shape today than it was a week ago because of U.S. actions and because some of the actions the Israelis took. So the bottom line is they are much further away from a nuclear weapon today than they were before the President took this bold action. That’s the most important thing to understand. Significant, very significant, substantial damage was done to a variety of different components, and we’re just learning more about it.

Understand that most of the damage that occurred here in Fordow occurred deep underground. That’s why we used penetrator weaponry to do that. So that’s why I hate commenting on these stories, because often the first story is wrong and the person putting it out there has an agenda. And I would say that story is a false story and it’s one that really shouldn’t be re-reported because it doesn’t accurately reflect what’s happening here.

QUESTION: Do you have a timeline for when you will have a full assessment of exactly the damage that was done?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, that’s a difficult – this is a very unique target set because basically you drilled a hole into the ground with 12 incredible bombs and then went 300 feet into a mountain. So I don’t think we’re going to be sending anyone down the hole anytime soon into those mountains. So suffice it to say that we are very confident. And by the way, it’s not just me saying this. The director of the IAEA, this is the line he used the other day. He said the Iran nuclear program looks – there was before the attack and after the attack, and they’re dramatically different things. That’s his line, and he’s an expert at this – not mine.

But the most important thing here at the end of the day is they have less capacity today than they did just a week ago to rapidly produce a nuclear weapon behind the world’s back and threaten the world, and the President deserves a tremendous amount of credit for taking this bold stand. And these pilots did something extraordinary. They flew halfway across the world and dropped 12 munition bombs perfectly down a ventilation shaft and did the world a great favor. These pilots did an incredible job. I’m blown away by it. It’s science fiction stuff. I mean, you look —

QUESTION: It was really remarkable.

SECRETARY RUBIO: You don’t believe it’s possible, but what they did was remarkable.

QUESTION: I mean, look, you know as well as anyone that you have a base that is extremely skeptical of foreign entanglements based on classified information that can’t be shared with the public. They have lived through the government saying trust us and then that not going so well. And so a reason many of them voted for President Trump, as a rejection of the Bush era foreign policy.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah.

QUESTION: Can you speak in more detail to those voters about why you are so confident that the significant damage has been done here, especially since we’re seeing some of these contradictory reports?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, some of it is on open source because of MAX-R and other technologies that are showing you the pictures. So in Isfahan, there was this conversion site, which is how you turn this metal into something that’s useful. That’s wiped out. Can you – you can rebuild anything that’s destroyed. You could if you wanted to, but it’s completely wiped out. And so they can’t do that today. Beyond that, all of the support structures around it as well.

In Natanz, which is also an underground facility, that had already been destroyed. Basically the Israelis had put a lot of damage on it, and then the United States went in with two additional heavy munitions that penetrated into the ground and did more damage. So it was already in bad shape and unusable, and now it’s worse off.

The hard one, the one that was really difficult, is Fordow because it’s buried underneath a mountain at about 2- to 300 meters underground and – meters or feet, I forget – 300 underground. It was deep. And there’s no doubt in our minds that very significant, substantial, lasting damage was done to their program. We will learn more and more about it, but the baseline is real damage was done. Of that, we’re very confident.

QUESTION: Does this mean —

SECRETARY RUBIO: We dropped 12 of these things into these holes. I mean, it’s not like we just did a couple and see how it went.

QUESTION: Does this mean the job is done and you can rule out the possibility of near-term future strikes?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, that was never the goal here. The goal the President set out was three nuclear sites. He targeted them. He says I want a one-off, a campaign in which we go in, wipe out three nuclear – hit three nuclear sites, hit them hard, and get out without any loss of life. And the mission was achieved – and without any escalation. And the mission was achieved. The truth of the matter is that happened on Saturday night. By Monday night, we had a ceasefire, so 48 hours later.

So not only did this bold move by the President – and he deserves a tremendous amount of credit for taking this bold move. Not only did this bold move have impact, but I actually think it helped end the conflict. It allowed Israel to say, okay, now the objectives that we wanted to see out of this operation have been achieved. And I think the President deserves a lot of credit. He had a defined mission, said this is what we’re going to do: We’re hitting three targets; we’re not hitting regime people; we’re not trying to overthrow the government; we’re not looking to invade; we’re going to – our problem with Iran is with the nuclear program; we’re going to hit the three sites that we’ve been negotiating over, and then we’re going to move off the mark. And that’s what we did.

QUESTION: So to the Americans that are concerned about where this is going, can you give them some assurance that this is it, that we’re not going into a war with Iran?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah, well, the President’s made clear he doesn’t want a war with Iran. He’s not looking for a war with Iran. In fact, he’s still looking for a deal.

QUESTION: Well, not wanting a war and getting entangled in one are two different things, right?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, look what happened. I mean, we basically flew, like I said, halfway across the world, dropped these weapons on three key sites, pulled away, and we were done. It showed tremendous amount of strategic patience by the President to do that. He clearly defined the goal, he delivered on it in the limited way that he had defined it, and then we moved on. We didn’t look to escalate. In fact, we looked to de-escalate. You saw they did an attack on one of our bases after warning us that they were going to do it. Nothing happened; the President didn’t respond. Two hours later, we have a ceasefire and that war is over.

Now, the ongoing problems with Iran remain. It’s the regime. If the regime wants a civil nuclear program, we can negotiate that with them. If what they want is a nuclear weapon, that’s not going to happen. And I think the President has proven that he’s willing to act when he says he’s going to do something.

QUESTION: Regime change, okay. Some people in your party really want it; some people really don’t want it. The President has posted about it, causing a little bit of confusion about what – where he’s at on this. So where is the President at, where’s the administration at on regime change?

SECRETARY RUBIO: I don’t – there should be no confusion about what the President said.

QUESTION: Okay.

SECRETARY RUBIO: What the President said is if the regime in Iran does not – wants to keep spending money on terrorism, keep spending money on trying to get nuclear weapons, keep spending money on rockets to attack Israel, and not develop their economy or help their people, maybe there will be regime change because the people of Iran are going to get sick of it.

QUESTION: It will come from within, though.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah.

QUESTION: That’s not something that the U.S. is – it’s not on the table for the U.S. to get involved in that as of now?

SECRETARY RUBIO: No. Listen, the world is filled with regimes I don’t like and the President doesn’t like and a lot of us wish didn’t exist. The United States’ job is not to go around and set up governments for every country. The United States’ job is to protect our national security. Our national security issue with Iran is with a clerical regime that wants nuclear weapons so they can threaten us, threaten Israel today, threaten us tomorrow. And the President has made clear that’s not going to happen. That’s what he’s focused on.

I think what he was commenting, which is exactly right, is look, if your country continues to fall behind economically because you’re living under sanctions because you insist on sponsoring terrorist organizations around the world and spending all your money on Hamas and Hizballah instead of on your own people, yeah, maybe there will be regime change, but it’s because the people of Iran will do it. But that’s not our plan; it’s never been our plan. He’s never once talked about that being our plan. The plan here was very simple: hit the three sites, the three nuclear sites, and get out. And he did it. No loss of American life. We lost tragically – more Americans died evacuating from Afghanistan than were killed in this operation, because the number in this operation were zero.

QUESTION: Let’s talk about the ceasefire. As of now, while we’re talking – this situation is so fast-moving – it seems to be holding after some scolding from President Trump for some bad behavior on both sides. But what exactly are the terms, and what incentivizes both sides to stick to it, particularly Iran?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, the terms are very simple, and that is that Israel said that their last – they had done – they had finished their mission. From the very beginning, the Israelis had a defined list of things they wanted to achieve, and once they were done with those things militarily, they were done. They had achieved those things. They had achieved those things by Sunday night, Monday morning, and they let us know that after their current operation that was ongoing, they did not intend to conduct any further operations unless they were attacked by Iran.

And it was at that point when the administration messaged that through intermediaries, the Qataris and others, that the Israelis had informed us that the current operation was their last operation unless they were attacked. And so the message was simple. If you don’t – once they leave – I don’t remember the time. It was maybe 3 a.m. Jerusalem time. Once that was done, if Iran didn’t hit back, Israel wouldn’t hit back and the war was over. That message was passed.

Anytime you do these ceasefires – because we lived this experience, for example, with India and Pakistan – there’s always a few skirmishes. Maybe someone’s clock was set wrong, and so they missed the time. In this particular case, unfortunately, tragically, in those final hours there was an attack that killed people in Israel, so that really stirred things up. It hit an apartment building and literally murdered people living there. And then there was this stray rocket that was launched. And we say stray because it was a one-off. It wasn’t part of a wave. And the Israelis were going to respond to that.

And the President gets on the phone and tells them don’t do this. If you do this, it’s going to restart the thing all over again. And the Israelis turned around and came home. And so now that’s the understanding.

QUESTION: He was frustrated. He dropped an F-bomb. I haven’t heard that from him in public before.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, whatever it takes. But the point is that – and look, and it was the right move on his part. Only he – he’s the only person in the world that could have gotten those planes to turn around. And it was not an easy decision for the Israelis, because they just had – I think at the time the death rose up to five people in this building – beautiful people, beautiful family, young people that had been killed in that strike. So it was tough. But Israel had extraordinary success. I mean, they literally wiped out the upper tiers of their leadership. Their air defenses are gone. Iran can’t defend their own airspace, so Israel was done because they had achieved their objectives.

QUESTION: Speaking of something no one has done, a lot of presidents have wanted NATO members to spend more on defense. The big headline coming out of this summit is that the NATO countries have agreed to raise their defense spending to 5 percent of their GDP. The President has had a tenuous relationship with NATO, with the EU as well. What do you think this new commitment from NATO will do to the relationship? What kind of impact will it have? Will it strengthen?

SECRETARY RUBIO: It’ll – it should strengthen it. I mean, I would call this the Trump summit because this really tracks back, I believe, to 2018 in the first administration I wasn’t in.

QUESTION: You’ve got is branding knack now. (Laughter.)

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, I do, okay. Well, yeah, I guess it gets catchy because the reason why is because in 2018 – I believe it was at his first summit, maybe it was 2017, but a while back. In in his first administration he challenged NATO. He had a chart and he brought it out and said look at these countries do a 0.9 percent of your spending on – he embarrassed a bunch of countries. And it set it motion a series of events that pressured our European partners to spend more on defense.

I get it. They’ve got these vast social safety network programs that they provide, and so every dollar you spent on military is money you’re taking away from education, health care, all the stuff that people have come to benefit from in your government. And so these are tough decisions, but look where we are in just a few years later. The combination of pressure from President Trump in his first administration and then a full invasion and war in Europe by Vladimir Putin has led now to virtually every country in – every single partner in the NATO Alliance pledging to get to that 5 percent mark, with the exception unfortunately of Spain, which has —

QUESTION: What are you going to do about that?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, it’s a problem. I mean, it’s a big problem. They claim they can do it for less, but Spain right now has deep internal political challenges. They have a left-of-center government that basically wants to spend very little to anything on military. And they’ve been recalcitrant. I think that’s one of the topics the leaders are going to have to confront today. It’s unfortunate. Spain is a country with capability and is a contributor. I mean, they send troops, they’re training troops, and they can do certain things. We have a presence there on the ground. But I don’t think that the agreement that Spain has reached is sustainable, and frankly it puts them in a very tough spot with regards to their other allies and partners.

So NATO, I think, has a chance to be – if everybody lives up to their commitment, it’s going to be a much stronger Alliance with more capable partners, and frankly allow the United States to still be a vibrant, strong member of it, the biggest member of it, but also reallocate resources to other parts of the world without taking away from the strength of the Alliance.

QUESTION: Another big moment today, the President will be meeting with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy. Right now things only seem to be getting worse in that conflict. Recent weeks have seen some of the deadliest attacks on Ukrainian civilians since the war broke out. You’ve been part of these high-profile talks with Russian officials. What more at this point is the administration doing to apply more pressure on Russia here?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, I don’t think the term is – a lot of people like to say about pressure on Russia. Our sense of it is that the Russians are going to try to achieve in the battlefield what they have demanded in the negotiating table, which is certain territories that there are administrative lines and the like. We think it’s going to be a lot harder for them to achieve that than they think it’s going to be.

The truth is that in this year alone, since January, over 80,000 Russian troops have been killed, just since January. I think you compare that to the Ukrainian numbers are far less. So the death ratio is very bad, but Putin keeps feeding into their war machine. We’d like this conflict to end. It’s bloody, it’s destructive, it’s nonsensical. But nonetheless, they have not shown a willingness to move forward.

So we’re going to continue to engage. The President is going to continue to engage. Look, the President —

QUESTION: Will he? Because he said before he might – he might walk away.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, engage in the sense that if there’s an opportunity for us to make a difference and get them to the table, we’re going to take it. He wants to see this war end.

A lot of people are saying put on more sanctions. Now, Congress is working on that. Lindsay Graham has a bill —

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY RUBIO: — and others. And that may happen. We’ve talked to them about how to frame it, how to structure it, because ultimately we think it needs to have enough flexibility for the President to be able to impose sanctions. And we haven’t taken off any of the sanctions that we have on. All the Russian sanctions are still in place.

I think what everybody has to remember, however, is that the minute we impose sanctions on Russia, if we did what everybody here wants us to do, and that is come in and crush them with more sanctions, we’d probably lose our ability to talk to them about the ceasefire, and then who’s talking to them? Because they don’t talk to anybody else in Europe. They don’t talk to anybody else in the world who is on our side of this thing and views it the way we do.

So I don’t think – the President will know the right time and place in which he’ll – may have to do that. He has said he may have to do that. But if he does it, you’re almost admitting that this is not going to be negotiated anytime soon, so he wants to give it every opportunity to have influence over the Russian Federation towards a ceasefire. And that’s the option he’s trying to preserve because it’s the option of peace.

QUESTION: One thing I find remarkable about this administration is the ideological diversity of President Trump’s cabinet. And I’m curious if you could bring us into the room for a moment about sort of the breadth of opinion, especially on this issue but in general. You have a range from hawks to isolationists. Like where do you see yourself on that, and what are those conversations like on the inside?

SECRETARY RUBIO: No. Well, on the inside there’s only one President of the United States. I almost – I find it curious when people argue as if somehow this is some coalition government and we all get a vote. There’s only one vote here. The President of the United States is the commander-in-chief.

QUESTION: I do know he likes to hear a diversity of opinions, right?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, that’s different. So people will give you their opinions.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY RUBIO: And obviously you can give opinions and – but ultimately, there’s only one decision. And so our job internally is to provide the President the best opinions that we may have, the best ideas that we might have, opportunities, and also, if somebody is bringing up information that we think is not accurate, challenge the accuracy – things of this nature.

QUESTION: Is there healthy debate?

SECRETARY RUBIO: One of the great things is that most of the people, at least on the national security front, have known each other for a long time. I’ve known John Ratcliffe for a very long time. I’ve known the Vice President for a very long time. I’ve known the Chief of Staff for a very long time. I’ve known Pete Hegseth before all of this. So we’ve known each other all, and so we have a very good working relationship. Steve Witkoff is from Miami. I know him very well. Well, he’s from New York but we obviously are – everyone from New York is now from Miami.

QUESTION: Yeah, Miami connection. The Miami-New York connection is pretty tight these days.

SECRETARY RUBIO: And – and one of the great people in the world, too. And so I think – but ultimately, once the President makes a decision, his instincts are uncanny, and we have to appreciate that that’s one of the things the people of the United States voted for is a President who has incredible instincts about the right thing to do. And our job is to operationalize that. When he says this is the direction I want to go, our job is not to spend all day trying to change his mind. Once he’s made a decision, our job is to go out and make sure the President’s orders are executed on. That’s the way administrations work.

When administrations fail is when you’re filled or surrounded by people who don’t agree with you, and so no matter what the president orders, spend their time trying to undermine him. We have a President who’s been elected. He’s been – very clearly – I mean, as clear as anyone who’s ever been elected – outlined how – what his views are on everything, including foreign policy. That’s what the people of our country voted for. That’s how our republic works. And our job is to go out and operationalize, execute on the President’s vision based on really uncanny instincts.

QUESTION: Well, and I think that’s one of the reasons that you have been given quite a lot of roles in this administration. Look, no offense to these guys, but I have seen the before-and-after pictures of Secretary of State Blinken and former NSA Jake Sullivan. They don’t look so hot at the end of all of this.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah. Well, how encouraging.

QUESTION: And they were each doing one of those jobs.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Yeah.

QUESTION: I mean, there are a lot of people that are saying how on earth are you wearing these two hats, and what are the tradeoffs that you have to think about?

SECRETARY RUBIO: There really isn’t. I mean, in many cases you end up being in the same meetings or in the same places; there’s just one less person in there, if you think about it. The two jobs really do overlap in many cases. Obviously, there’s the function of running the agency of the Department of State, but what I find myself in many cases doing is when someone – a lot of people would come to Washington, for example, for meetings and they’d want to meet with the National Security Advisor and then meet with me as Secretary of State. Now they can do both in one meeting. The same with when we’re around the table, for example, in the Situation Room. There was a chair for the National Security Council and one for the State Department; now they’re both there. You know what —

QUESTION: Are you doing more time at the White House than traveling abroad? Like where —

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, when there’s a conflict, yeah.

QUESTION: Yeah.

SECRETARY RUBIO: I mean, and so what we’ve had over the last couple weeks is we’ve known that there might be something breaking out in the Middle East, and then we had to manage our role in it. So yeah, you spend more time there in that regard. But I go to the State Department almost every day because we have a lot of bilateral meetings with foreign ministers that are coming to town, so I go and see them over there. But it’s pretty seamless.

QUESTION: Well, and the NSC has changed a lot under you. And I think a lot of people know what the Secretary of State role is, but how do you envision – what does the Marco Rubio NSC look like?

SECRETARY RUBIO: Well, it’s not the Marco Rubio NSC. It’s the Donald Trump NSC. And what – its job is to coordinate the agencies to execute the President’s mission. So it’s the conductor of an orchestra. The NSC doesn’t play the clarinet or the flute or the violin. It’s job as the conductor is to make sure that everybody is playing the sheet music based on their instrument. And so you coordinate the different elements of our government depending on the issue, the national security issue.

So if it’s, in this case, what’s happening over the last couple weeks, it’s making sure the Department of Defense, the Department of Treasury, the Justice Department, all the different elements of government are represented around the table and each of them have a piece or something they’re supposed to be executing on and are doing their part. But ultimately the ideas and the execution comes from the individual agencies. The job of the National Security Council is just to coordinate that to ensure that all of the agencies are working together and doing their part of the broader strategic plan.

And so in our – and we have a great team at State too, so it kind of works seamlessly. It’s gone – it’s worked very well so far, and I think the outcome proves it here with regards to what we’ve seen with Israel and Iran.

QUESTION: And on that metaphor, I’ll let you go to your conducting. Thank you so much, Secretary.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Thank you.

QUESTION: We really appreciate it.

SECRETARY RUBIO: Thank you.

Tags
Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Office of the Spokesperson Russia-Ukraine War The Secretary of State Situation in the Middle East Spain


The Week at State: June 20 – June 26, 2025
06/27/2025


View as a webpage / Share





June 20 – June 26

Hello from Washington. Here’s what happened at State this past week. ⤵️📜 Secretary Rubio and President Trump traveled to the NATO Summit in The Netherlands, where Allies committed to investing 5 percent of GDP annually in defense.
🕊️President Trump announced a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
✈️ Deputy Secretary Landau represented the U.S. at the Organization of American States General Assembly.



Historic Results at NATO Summit

President Trump represents the United States at the 2025 NATO summit. (Official White House Photo)

On June 24, President Trump and Secretary Rubio traveled to The Hague, Netherlands, for the 2025 NATO Summit. His Majesty King Willem-Alexander and Her Majesty Queen Máxima hosted the leaders.

After two days of meetings and negotiations, President Trump delivered the biggest shift in NATO’s 76-year history: securing Allies’ commitment to investing 5 percent in defense.

On June 25, Secretary Rubio met with the G7 foreign ministers on the margins of the NATO Summit, focusing on decisive U.S. action against Iran’s key nuclear facilities. The foreign ministers agreed that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon and reviewed next steps to promote peace in the region.

On his return, President Trump called the summit, “the most unified and productive in history.”


President Trump Announces Ceasefire After Strikes

President Trump and Secretary Rubio monitor U.S. airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities while in the White House Situation Room. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

Following U.S. airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities on June 21, President Trump reported monumental damage that undermined Iran’s ability to produce nuclear weapons.

Iran responded with attacks against U.S. assets in Qatar. These were intercepted by coordinated U.S.-Qatari defenses. State Department Spokesperson Bruce expressed “deep appreciation for the Government of Qatar's cooperation, [and] the American men and women in uniform for the vital role they continue to play for U.S. and regional security.”

After the airstrikes, Secretary Rubio affirmed that the door remained open to diplomacy. On June 23, President Trump announced that Iran and Israel agreed to a complete and total ceasefire.

In a June 25 interview with Politico, Secretary Rubio emphasized that “the Iranian program, the nuclear program today, looks nothing like it did just a week ago” and that Iran is now “much further away from a nuclear weapon today than they were before the President took this bold action.”


Strengthening Ties in the Western Hemisphere

Deputy Secretary Landau attends the 55th Organization of American States General Assembly in St. John’s, Antigua and Barbuda. (OAS)

From June 25-27, Deputy Secretary Landau represented the U.S. at the 55th regular session of the Organization of American States General Assembly, taking place in St. John’s, Antigua and Barbuda.

In meetings with foreign counterparts, the Deputy Secretary focused on:Urging partners to address the illegal immigration crisis
Strengthening the region’s response to the situations in Venezuela and Haiti
Advocating for the election of Rosa María Payá to serve as Commissioner on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR)

On June 26, Secretary Rubio underscored his support for Rosa María Payá’s candidacy as Commissioner on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. “I have full confidence in her ability to make the Commission more effective, efficient, and relevant.”


News You May Have MissedSecretary Rubio announced new visa restrictions targeting close associates of fentanyl smugglers, making America safer by dismantling the flow of fentanyl and other illicit drugs into the United States.
The United States sanctioned a key leader of Tren de Aragua (TdA), a Foreign Terrorist Organization that originated in Venezuela.
Deputy Secretary Landau met with Argentine Minister of Foreign Affairs Gerardo Werthein ahead of the Organization of American States General Assembly.
The United States announced new sanctions against illicit traders and shipping facilitators that sustain the Houthis.
African Affairs Senior Bureau Official Troy Fitrell traveled to Angola for the 17th U.S.-Africa Business Summit to engage with leaders, forge commercial partnerships, and create new opportunities for investment.


Looking AheadJuly 4: U.S. Independence Day
Note to Our Readers

📩 We welcome feedback at EmailTeam@state.gov

Was this forwarded to you? Subscribe to The Week at State for weekly updates on important work, activities, and news straight from the State Department.

Useful linksTravel advisories and updates for U.S. Citizens
Did you know that you can invite a State Department official to speak at your school, business, or organization? Learn about what we do through the firsthand experience of one of our representatives.

Read More at State.gov



Stay connected with the Department of State:





External links found in this content or on Department of State websites that go to non-Department websites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views or privacy policies contained therein.

This email was sent to politikimx@gmail.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of State · 2201 C Street NW · Washington, DC 20520



Ετικέτες

"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ

"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ
"ΠΑΡΑΠΟΝΟ ΦΥΛΗΣ" ΠΟΛΥΕΤΗΣ ΗΛΕΚΤΡΟΝΙΚΟΣ ΙΣΤΟΧΩΡΟΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΩΝ

"ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ για τον μικρό μας Αγγελο,ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"

"ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ για τον μικρό μας Αγγελο,ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"
Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ" θα ζητά ΕΣΑΕΙ.."ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΟΝ ΜΑΡΙΟ ΣΟΥΛΟΥΚΟ"!!

ΕΘΝΙΚΟ ΚΕΝΤΡΟ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ"

ΕΘΝΙΚΟ ΚΕΝΤΡΟ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ"
Ερευνα,Συνεντεύξεις και επισήμανση της σπουδαιότητος του τότε ΕΘΝΙΚΟΥ ΚΕΝΤΡΟΥ ΠΑΡΑΣΚΕΥΗΣ ΠΑΡΑΓΩΓΩΝ ΑΙΜΑΤΟΣ "ΗΛΙΑΣ ΠΟΛΙΤΗΣ" απο το Περιοδικό "ΑΧΑΡΝΕΩΝ Εργα" το έτος 2004!!
Ο Ιστοχώρος μας ΔΕΝ ΛΟΓΟΚΡΙΝΕΙ τα κείμενα των Αρθρογράφων του. Αυτά δημοσιεύονται εκφράζοντας τους ιδίους.
Απαγορεύεται η αναδημοσίευση, αναπαραγωγή, ολική, μερική ή περιληπτική ή κατά παράφραση ή διασκευή ή απόδοση του περιεχομένου του παρόντος διαδικτυακού τόπου σε ό,τι αφορά τα άρθρα της ΜΑΡΙΑΣ ΧΑΤΖΗΔΑΚΗ ΒΑΒΟΥΡΑΝΑΚΗ και του ΓΙΑΝΝΗ Γ. ΒΑΒΟΥΡΑΝΑΚΗ με οποιονδήποτε τρόπο, ηλεκτρονικό, μηχανικό, φωτοτυπικό ή άλλο, χωρίς την προηγούμενη γραπτή άδεια των Αρθρογράφων. Νόμος 2121/1993 - Νόμος 3057/2002, ο οποίος ενσωμάτωσε την οδηγία 2001/29 του Ευρωπαϊκού Κοινοβουλίου και κανόνες Διεθνούς Δικαίου που ισχύουν στην Ελλάδα.

Tι ήταν η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ»..για όσους δεν γνωρίζουν.

Η «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» γεννήθηκε το 2000,ως συνέχεια του Περιοδικού «ΑΧΑΡΝΕΩΝ Έργα». Δημιουργήθηκε από Επαγγελματίες Εκδότες με δεκαετίες στον τομέα της Διαφήμισης, των Εκδόσεων και των Δημοσίων Σχέσεων και αρχικά ήταν μια Υπερτοπική Εφημερίδα με κύριο αντικείμενο το Αυτοδιοικητικό Ρεπορτάζ.

Επί χρόνια, κυκλοφορούσε την έντυπη έκδοσή της σε ένα ικανότατο τιράζ (5000 καλαίσθητων φύλλων εβδομαδιαίως) και εντυπωσίαζε με την ποιότητα της εμφάνισης και το ουσιώδες, μαχητικό και έντιμο περιεχόμενο της.
Η δύναμη της Πένας της Εφημερίδας, η Ειλικρίνεια, οι Ερευνές της που έφερναν πάντα ουσιαστικό αποτέλεσμα ενημέρωσης, την έφεραν πολύ γρήγορα πρώτη στην προτίμηση των αναγνωστών και γρήγορα εξελίχθηκε σε Εφημερίδα Γνώμης και όχι μόνον για την Περιφέρεια στην οποία κυκλοφορούσε.

=Επι είκοσι τέσσαρα (24) χρόνια, στηρίζει τον Απόδημο Ελληνισμό, χωρίς καμία-ούτε την παραμικρή- διακοπή

. =Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, προβάλλει με αίσθηση καθήκοντος κάθε ξεχωριστό, έντιμο και υπεύθυνο Πολιτικό της Πολιτικής Σκηνής. Στις σελίδες της, θα βρείτε ακόμα και σήμερα μόνο άξιες και χρήσιμες Πολιτικές Προσωπικότητες αλλά και ενημέρωση από κάθε Κόμμα της Ελληνικής Βουλής. Η «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» ουδέποτε διαχώρησε τους αναγνώστες της ανάλογα με τα πολιτικά τους πιστεύω. Επραττε το καθήκον της, ενημερώνοντας όλους τους Ελληνες, ως όφειλε.

=Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, δίνει βήμα στους αδέσμευτους, τους επιτυχημένους, τους γνώστες και θιασώτες της Αλήθειας. Στηρίζει τον Θεσμό της Ελληνικής Οικογένειας, την Παιδεία, την Ελληνική Ιστορία, προβάλλει με όλες της τις δυνάμεις τους Αδελφούς μας απανταχού της Γης, ενημερώνει για τα επιτεύγματα της Επιστήμης, της Επιχειρηματικότητας και πολλά άλλα που πολύ καλά γνωρίζουν οι Αναγνώστες της.

=Επί είκοσι τέσσαρα ολόκληρα χρόνια, ο απλός δημότης–πολίτης, φιλοξενείται στις σελίδες της με μόνη προϋπόθεση την ειλικρινή και αντικειμενική γραφή και την ελεύθερη Γνώμη, η οποία ΟΥΔΕΠΟΤΕ λογοκρίθηκε.

Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ», είναι ένα βήμα Ισονομίας και Ισοπολιτείας, έννοιες απόλυτα επιθυμητές, ιδιαιτέρως στις ημέρες μας. Είναι ο δικτυακός τόπος της έκφρασης του πολίτη και της εποικοδομητικής κριτικής, μακριά από κάθε στήριξη αφού δεν ετύγχανε οικονομικής υποστήριξης από Δήμους, Κυβερνήσεις ή όποιους άλλους Δημόσιους ή Ιδιωτικούς Φορείς, δεν είχε ΠΟΤΕ χορηγούς, ή οποιασδήποτε μορφής υποστηρικτές. Απολαμβάνει όμως Διεθνούς σεβασμού αφού φιλοξενεί ενημέρωση από αρκετά ξένα Κράτη πράγμα που της περιποιεί βεβαίως, μέγιστη τιμή.

Η ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΔΑ «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» διαγράφει απο την γέννησή της μια αξιοζήλευτη πορεία και απέκτησε εξ αιτίας αυτού,ΜΕΓΙΣΤΗ αναγνωσιμότητα. Η Εφημερίδα «ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ» κέρδισε την αποδοχή και τον σεβασμό που της ανήκει, με «εξετάσεις» εικοσι τεσσάρων ολόκληρων ετών, με συνεχείς αιματηρούς αγώνες κατά της τοπικής διαπλοκής, με αγώνα επιβίωσης σε πολύ δύσκολους καιρούς, με Εντιμότητα, αίσθηση Καθήκοντος και Ευθύνης.

ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΠΕΝΤΕ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2025

ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΠΕΝΤΕ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2025
ΕΙΚΟΣΙ ΠΕΝΤΕ ΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΑ ΧΡΟΝΙΑ "ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ"!! 2000-2025

Οι αρθρογράφοι των οποίων τα άρθρα δημοσιεύονται ώδε ΔΕΝ ΛΟΓΟΚΡΙΝΟΝΤΑΙ επ ουδενί.

Οι αρθρογράφοι των οποίων τα άρθρα δημοσιεύονται ώδε ΔΕΝ ΛΟΓΟΚΡΙΝΟΝΤΑΙ επ ουδενί. Οι απόψεις τους αφορούν τους ιδίους και όχι απαραίτητα την θέση και άποψη της Εφημερίδας.