Madrid has contrasted Chancellor Friedrich Merzās comments in the Oval Office with the āpro-European spiritā of his predecessors
Spainās top diplomat has rebuked German Chancellor Friedrich Merz for failing to show solidarity after US President Donald Trump launched a verbal attack on Madrid during a White House press conference on Tuesday.
Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said he had conveyed his āsurpriseā at Merzās reaction to his German counterpart, Johann Wadepuhl.
During his Oval Office meeting with Trump, Merz did not back Spain as the US leader branded Madrid āterribleā over its refusal to host American planes for the ongoing war in the Middle East.
The German chancellor also remained silent when Trump openly declared that the US could ājust fly in and useā Spanish military bases regardless of Madridās refusal.
If we want, we can just fly to the Spanish bases and use them without permission ā Trump. pic.twitter.com/5CHIVF7mON
ā Jürgen Nauditt š©šŖšŗš¦ (@jurgen_nauditt) March 3, 2026
Instead, Merz pivoted to echo Trumpās criticism, claiming Spain was the only EU country that has not agreed to increase defense spending to 5% of its GDP.
āWhen you share a currency, a common trade policy, and a common market with another country, you expect⦠solidarity,ā Albares told national broadcaster RTVE on Wednesday.
āI canāt imagine [former Chancellor Angela] Merkel or [former Chancellor Olaf] Scholz making statements like that; there was a different pro-European spirit then,ā Albares said.
Solidarity is widely considered a founding pillar of the EU. Both Merz and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen have repeatedly invoked the principle when pressuring EU members to support Ukraine financially and militarily against Russia. They have also demanded solidarity from Hungary and Slovakia over Russian energy imports.
All NATO allies have agreed in principle to the 5% of GDP defense spending target set by Trump, but several members, including Italy and Belgium, have expressed opposition or reluctance. Spain called the target āimpossible,ā arguing it would force deep cuts to social services or higher taxes, and secured an exemption to spend only 2.1% of GDP.
READ MORE: Trump to cut off āall tradeā with Spain
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has openly condemned the US strikes on Iran, describing them as an āunjustified and dangerous military intervention that is outside international law.ā
He reiterated his position in a statement on X on Wednesday, saying āNo to warā and āNo to violations of international law.ā
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