YouTube Notes:
In this Wednesday update, Susan Kokinda argues that President Trump has openly ruptured with the UK over Iran, base access, and broader British policies on energy and immigration, while treating Germany under Chancellor Friedrich Merz as a more reliable partner, and moving to cut trade with Spain over NATO and base issues.
She says Britain blocked US use of Diego Garcia and other Royal Air Force bases for initial strikes, prompting Trump’s public criticism. Kokinda frames Lloyd’s of London’s decision to cancel war-risk coverage for Gulf shipping as a weapon of British imperial power, and highlights Trump’s response: directing the US Development Finance Corporation to provide political risk insurance and putting the Navy on notice to escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
She adds that Iranian strikes on Gulf neighbors pushed Gulf Cooperation Council states* into condemning Iran and aligning more closely with the US.
*Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE)
