NewsNovo
At the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, President Donald Trump declared the alliance had failed two tests he set himself, one over Greenland and one over Iran.
That framing is worth examining carefully: a president who tests allies rather than coordinates with them is a president whose next move becomes harder to read and harder for markets to price.
The two tests Trump named Trump told reporters Wednesday he had been watching to see whether NATO members would back American ambitions over Greenland and take a harder line on Iran, which he called "the No.
1 state sponsor of terror." Both answers, he said, were no. "They were unwilling to help us," Trump said.
Keep reading