quarta-feira, 1 de abril de 2026

Trump strongly considering pulling out of NATO: The Telegraph

Terrifying reality of Trump pulling out of NATO laid bare as security chiefs in blind panic

Trump lashes out at Nato: will Europe stand up to him? | The Latest

Trump Says He’s Considering Pulling U.S. Out Of NATO—Calls It A ‘Paper Tiger’

 

In multiple interviews on April 1, 2026, President Donald Trump stated he is "absolutely" considering withdrawing the United States from NATO. He described the 32-member alliance as a "paper tiger" and indicated that a potential U.S. exit is now "beyond reconsideration".

 


Trump says he is ‘absolutely’ considering withdrawing US from Nato

In multiple interviews on April 1, 2026, President Donald Trump stated he is "absolutely" considering withdrawing the United States from NATO. He described the 32-member alliance as a "paper tiger" and indicated that a potential U.S. exit is now "beyond reconsideration".

 

Key Reasons for Trump's Stance

The President's remarks follow a significant rift with European allies over the ongoing U.S.-Israel war in Iran, which began on February 28, 2024:

 

Lack of Support in Iran: Trump expressed "disgust" that NATO members refused to join military operations or send warships to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has blocked in retaliation for the conflict.

Basing and Overflight Refusals: Several allies, including Spain, Italy, and France, denied the U.S. use of their military bases or airspace for strikes against Iran.

"One-Way Street": Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio characterized the alliance as a "one-way street" where the U.S. defends Europe but receives no assistance when needed for its own objectives.

 

Legal and Practical Hurdles

While Trump has escalated his rhetoric, a unilateral withdrawal faces substantial obstacles:

2023 Congressional Law: A measure co-sponsored by Marco Rubio in 2023 requires a two-thirds Senate super-majority or an Act of Congress to authorize a U.S. withdrawal from NATO.

Executive Workarounds: Legal experts suggest Trump could attempt to circumvent Congress by citing his Commander-in-Chief authority over foreign policy or by withdrawing troops and personnel from the alliance's command structure without formally exiting the treaty.

Constitutional Conflict: Any attempt to bypass the 2023 law would likely trigger a major legal battle between the executive branch and Congress.

 

United Kingdom: Prime Minister Keir Starmer reaffirmed that the U.K. is "fully committed" to NATO but insisted he would not let the country be "dragged into" the Iran war.

Europe: Leaders in Germany and Poland have called for calm while reaffirming their commitment to the alliance, though some expressed "disturbing" concern that U.S. deterrence is already being weakened.

 

Trump is scheduled to address the nation in a primetime speech at 9 p.m. ET on Wednesday, April 1, to provide further updates on the war and the future of the alliance.

Trump says he is ‘absolutely’ considering withdrawing US from Nato

 


Trump says he is ‘absolutely’ considering withdrawing US from Nato

 

The president, a longtime critic of Nato, has stepped up criticism after allies refused to join the US-Israel war on Iran

 

Julian Borger Senior international correspondent

Wed 1 Apr 2026 17.04 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/01/trump-says-he-is-absolutely-considering-withdrawing-us-from-nato

 

Donald Trump has said he is “absolutely” considering withdrawing the US from Nato, warning that the matter was “beyond reconsideration” after the refusal of US allies to join the US-Israeli war against Iran.

 

The president’s threats, his most determined to date, have left the alliance facing its worst crisis in its 77-year history, a former US ambassador has warned.

 

Trump has long been vocally sceptical about the benefit of Nato membership to the US, but since North Atlantic allies have refused to take part in the month-long, faltering US-Israeli assault on Iran, the president has stepped up his rhetoric.

 

He told Reuters news agency on Wednesday he was “absolutely without question” considering withdrawal, after telling the Telegraph the matter was “beyond reconsideration”, insisting he had never been “swayed by Nato”. He signalled that he would express his disgust for Nato in an address to the nation scheduled for Wednesday evening.

 

It could be politically and constitutionally difficult for Trump to bring about formal withdrawal from the 1949 Washington treaty, Nato’s founding document, but Ivo Daalder, US permanent representative at Nato headquarters from 2009 to 2013, argued the serious damage to the alliance had already been done.

 

“This is by far the worst crisis Nato has ever confronted. Military alliances are, at their core, based on trust: the confidence that if I am attacked, you will come help defend,” Daalder wrote in an online commentary. “It’s hard to see how any European country will now be able and willing to trust the United States to come to its defence.”

 

 

Trump launched the war on Iran on 28 February in partnership with the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, but without consulting Nato allies. He did not invoke article 5 of the treaty, which triggers collective defence from other members in the event of an “an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America”. Such an attack had not taken place.

 

More than a month into the war, there is no sign of the regime change or collapse that Trump and Netanyahu had hoped for, and Tehran’s response – closing the economically vital strait of Hormuz – has caused an oil price surge and a worldwide shortage of fertiliser and other essential goods, threatening a global recession.

 

Trump has swung between claiming a negotiated end to the war is imminent and threatening a ground assault, while calling on US allies to join the fight and force the strait back open. None of Washington’s traditional partners have come forward. Some European allies have declared the US-Israeli attack to be illegal and several have withheld the overflight rights and use of bases on their territory.

 

Trump has consequently lashed out at European capitals, denouncing them as “cowards”, and expressing particular contempt for the UK. “You don’t even have a navy,” Trump told the Telegraph. “You’re too old and had aircraft carriers that didn’t work.”

 

The anti-Nato rhetoric has been echoed by the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, and by the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who was a staunch supporter of the alliance when he was a senator.

 

Rubio told Fox News: “We are going to have to re-examine whether or not this alliance, that has served this country well for a while, is still serving that purpose or has now become a one-way street, where America is simply in a position to help Europe but when we need the help of our allies, they deny us basing rights and overflight.”

 

The UK’s prime minister, Keir Starmer, has shrugged off the administration’s jibes as “noise”, insisting that “Nato is the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen”. He restated his position on the Iran conflict that “this is not our war, and we’re not going to get dragged into it”.

 

In response to previous Trump criticism, the UK and other European allies have raised their defence spending and tried hard, with diminishing success, to persuade him to maintain US support for Ukraine’s defence against Russia. Nato’s secretary general, Mark Rutte, has gone out of his way to flatter Trump, to the extent of expressing support for the Iran war, despite the opposition of almost all the alliance’s other 31 members.

 

“Backing one ally when 31 oppose isn’t the best way to maintain unity,” Daalder said. “We also now know that Trump does his own thing and doesn’t listen to anyone, including Trump whisperers.”

 

In an effort to “Trump-proof” the alliance, Congress passed the National Defence Authorization Act (NDAA) in 2024, prohibiting a US president from unilaterally withdrawing the US from Nato without two-thirds Senate approval or an act of Congress – a provision co-sponsored by Rubio. The NDAA also prohibits using any federal funds to facilitate a withdrawal.

 

“Congress will not sit by while this president tries to unravel an alliance that has kept Americans safe for decades,” the Democratic senator Mark Warner said on Wednesday. “Our commitment to Nato is ironclad, and we will use every tool available to defend it.”

 

Any attempt to leave Nato formally would be likely to trigger a constitutional crisis that would almost certainly go to the US supreme court. However, the court has a record of siding with the executive in disputes over foreign policy issues.

 

“Other presidents have withdrawn from treaties,” Daalder pointed out. “In any case, whatever the legal status, Trump can undermine Nato by withdrawing troops, pulling US personnel from the Nato command structure and doing little if anything in case of an attack – all perfectly legal.”

 

Ruth Deyermond, a senior lecturer at the department of war studies in King’s College London, said the crisis facing the alliance would not simply recede at the end of Trump’s White House tenure. “This is wishful thinking,” Deyermond said on Bluesky. “The failure to understand the importance of the alliance for US security and the taking of allies for granted isn’t unique to the Trump administration.”

 

“This is why the old Nato is gone and Europeans (plus Canada), need to develop a new security framework to replace it,” she said. “It’s frightening, difficult, and expensive, but that doesn’t make it less necessary or urgent.”

 

Starmer signalled on Wednesday that he would use an upcoming summit with EU countries to solidify economic and security ties, calling for: “A partnership for the dangerous world that we must navigate together.”

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Paying Europe to send us immigrants

Why Immigration Can't Fix Aging Populations (The Math Doesn't Work)

 

Immigration cannot fully fix aging populations because immigrants also age, and to significantly alter dependency ratios, unprecedented and unsustainable, continuously high levels of migration would be required.

 


Immigration cannot fully fix aging populations because immigrants also age, and to significantly alter dependency ratios, unprecedented and unsustainable, continuously high levels of migration would be required. While younger immigrants can boost the labor force, their impact on reducing the overall age structure is small, as they often face lower early incomes and eventually join the retirement demographic.

 

Immigrants Age Too: Immigrants are not perpetually young. Over time, they move from the workforce into retirement, adding to the same old-age dependency ratio that they were meant to improve.

Limited Demographic Impact: Even in scenarios with high immigration, studies show only a small percentage (e.g., only about 12% in the U.S.) of aging is offset by 2060, making it a marginal factor rather than a complete solution.

High Inflow Needed: To counteract the trend of low fertility rates and growing retiree populations, immigration would need to be sustained at unsustainable levels, creating immense pressure on housing, infrastructure, and social integration.

Fertility Rate Convergence: While immigrants often have higher fertility rates upon arrival, these rates generally decline over time, converging with the lower fertility rates of the native-born population.

Economic Factors: New legal immigrants often have lower incomes initially, which reduces their immediate impact on funding Social Security and public services through taxes, often increasing the usage of tax-funded benefits.

Not a Permanent Solution: Immigration acts as a temporary stabilizer for population decline, but it does not fix the root demographic issue of low fertility rates.

Why Immigration Can't Fix Aging Populations (The Math Doesn't Work)

Trump 'strongly considering' pulling out of NATO

 

As of April 1, 2026, President Trump has threatened to withdraw the U.S. from NATO due to allies' refusal to support the U.S.-led war in Iran.

 


As of April 1, 2026, President Trump has threatened to withdraw the U.S. from NATO due to allies' refusal to support the U.S.-led war in Iran. He stated the conflict would conclude in two or three weeks and dismissed the closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran as a problem for other countries to manage.

 

Key Details

NATO Threats: Trump described U.S. membership in NATO as "beyond reconsideration" after European leaders, including Germany, Britain, and France, refused to aid in securing the Strait of Hormuz.

Strait of Hormuz: As Iran blocked the key oil transit route, causing global energy price spikes, Trump told allies, particularly the UK, to "go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT".

War Outlook: Despite the ongoing crisis, Trump predicted a swift end, claiming he had already addressed Iran's nuclear program.

Allied Response: Germany and other nations declined to participate, arguing they did not start the war, while some offered support only after combat ends.

 

The conflict, initiated without consultation, has entered its third week and has resulted in over 2,000 deaths.

President Trump said that he was considering leaving NATO over allies’ failure to support his Iran offensive. He suggested that the U.S. war would end in two or three weeks and that Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz would be a problem for others to solve.

 


Iran War Live Updates: Trump Berates Allies While Signaling He Will Wind Down the War

President Trump said that he was considering leaving NATO over allies’ failure to support his Iran offensive. He suggested that the U.S. war would end in two or three weeks and that Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz would be a problem for others to solve.

 

Abdi Latif Dahir Megan Specia and Erika Solomon

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/01/world/iran-war-trump-oil-news

 

Here’s the latest.

President Trump said that he was considering pulling the United States out of NATO over the war with Iran, as he heaps pressure on allies to manage the fallout of a conflict he signaled he would wind down in two or three weeks.

 

In an interview with Britain’s Telegraph newspaper published on Wednesday, Mr. Trump was asked whether he was reconsidering U.S. membership in the military alliance and was quoted as replying, “Oh yes,” and that it was “beyond reconsideration.” The remarks were published hours after President Trump said that he expected the U.S. military campaign in Iran would be over “very soon” and dismissed Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has jolted global energy markets, as a problem for other countries to resolve.

 

In a social media post on Tuesday, Mr. Trump had again denigrated U.S. allies, chiefly Britain, for not heeding his call for help in securing the strait, a conduit for much of the global oil supply, and said that the United States would not come to their aid in the future. An Iranian official emphasized on Wednesday that the United States would not regain access to the waterway, saying in a social media post: “The Strait of Hormuz will certainly reopen, but not for you.”

 

Mr. Trump was scheduled to deliver “an important update” on the war in a national address at 9 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday, said Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary. On Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Trump told reporters that he had achieved his primary goal of preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, though there is no evidence that the United States or Israel has destroyed the country’s stockpile of near-bomb-grade fuel.

 

Earlier Tuesday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said that the U.S. had achieved such control of Iran’s skies that it was flying B-52 bombers directly over Iranian territory. But Mr. Hegseth acknowledged that Iran retained the ability to retaliate with missiles and drones targeting U.S. allies in the region. On Wednesday morning, the authorities in Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar all reported missile or drone attacks from Iran.

 

The Israeli military said on Wednesday that it had completed a wave of strikes against Iranian government infrastructure in Tehran, the capital, without specifying the targets. Iranian state television reported that three locations were hit, including an area northeast of Tehran with military buildings and housing.

 

Here’s what else we’re covering:

 

American kidnapped: A journalist, Shelly Kittleson, was kidnapped in Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, on Tuesday evening, the country’s Interior Ministry said. The ministry said that security forces had pursued the kidnappers, arrested one suspect and seized a vehicle used in the abduction. The suspect is a member of the Iranian-allied paramilitary group Kataib Hezbollah, two senior Iraqi security officials said.

 

Houthis: In Yemen, the Iran-backed Houthi militia said it had launched ballistic missiles at Israel on Wednesday. Israel said it had detected a missile launch from Yemen toward its territory. The Houthis entered the war on Saturday by launching a missile attack on what they said were Israeli military targets.

 

Lebanon: Israeli strikes in Beirut killed at least seven people and wounded 24 others early Wednesday, Lebanon’s national news agency reported. And there were more Israeli strikes across southern Lebanon, a day after Israel said it planned to occupy and control a large swath of the region and demolish entire towns.

 

Death tolls: The Human Rights Activists News Agency said at least 1,598 civilians had been killed, including 244 children, in Iran since the war began. Lebanon’s health ministry said that more than 1,260 Lebanese had been killed as of Tuesday, with more than 3,750 others wounded, since the latest fighting between Israel and Hezbollah began. In Iran’s attacks across the Middle East, at least 50 people have been killed in Gulf nations. In Israel, at least 17 had been killed as of Friday. The American death toll stands at 13 service members, with hundreds of others wounded.

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Trump too busy with ballroom and money-making schemes to focus on war, says Murphy

 

Architects and design experts warn that the rushed timeline for President Trump’s $400 million White House ballroom addition has resulted in a flawed, "unrefined" project.

 


Trump’s Ballroom Design Has Barely Been Scrutinized Architects Say It Shows

Architects and design experts warn that the rushed timeline for President Trump’s $400 million White House ballroom addition has resulted in a flawed, "unrefined" project. Critics argue the design shows a lack of the rigorous public scrutiny typically required for major modifications to the nation's most iconic building.

 

Specific design flaws and concerns highlighted by experts include:

Non-functional Elements: The design includes a massive south-facing portico that project architect Shalom Baranes admitted is "more ornamental than functional," containing no doors that actually lead into the ballroom. It also reportedly features "stairs to nowhere".

Visual Dominance: At roughly 90,000 square feet, the structure is more than three times the cubic volume of the West Wing. This scale makes it the visually dominant part of the White House complex when viewed from the south, disrupting the building's historic neoclassical symmetry.

Blocked Views and Natural Light: Large columns along the portico are placed in a way that will block natural light and interior views for guests.

Deceptive Façade: On the north-facing wall visible to tourists, "fake windows" (decorative masonry niches) are used to conceal a row of bathroom stalls.

Historical Disruption: The addition disrupts the historic White House driveway designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and impedes the original sightline between the White House and the Capitol planned by Pierre Charles L'Enfant.

Capacity Issues: Although intended to seat 1,000 guests, industry standards suggest the space is sized for 1,500, leading critics to warn that smaller events may feel empty.

 

Project Status

The project followed the demolition of the 123-year-old East Wing in October 2025. While the White House maintains it is a "beautiful" and necessary addition funded by private donors, approximately 97% of more than 32,000 public comments submitted to the National Capital Planning Commission were negative. A final vote by the commission is scheduled for April 2, 2026.

Trump’s Ballroom Design Has Barely Been Scrutinized Architects Say It Shows

 





Trump’s Ballroom Design Has Barely Been Scrutinized

Architects Say It Shows

 

President Trump’s ballroom has rushed toward construction, with little time for public review of this major addition to the White House.

 

Critics warn it still has many issues — its portico is too big, its stairs lead nowhere, its columns will block views from inside the ballroom.

 

And that’s just the portico.

 

These are the kinds of details that are normally scrutinized in the design of any building so significant — and in the review that public projects face in the nation’s capital. But barring a judge’s intervention, the ballroom is set to move forward this week anyway.

 

By Emily Badger, Junho Lee and Larry Buchanan

Junho Lee is a trained architect, Larry Buchanan studied fine arts, and Emily Badger has long written about urban planning.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/03/29/upshot/white-house-ballroom.html

March 29, 2026

 

The National Capital Planning Commission is scheduled on Thursday to take a final vote approving President Trump’s ballroom, clearing the last review for a major addition to the White House that was publicly unveiled in detail only in January. Last month, another panel led by the president’s allies, the Commission of Fine Arts, discussed the ballroom for 12 minutes before unanimously approving it.

 

The hurried reviews, with construction cranes already swiveling above the White House grounds, are an abrupt departure from how new monuments, museums and even modest renovations have been designed and refined in the capital for decades. And the ballroom will be worse off for it, architects warn.

 

Take the White House fence, a far more modest part of the complex that received more probing attention from both commissions when it was rebuilt during Mr. Trump’s first term.

 

 

 

 

 

Total pier width

 

Fence to pier connection detail

 

Post top design

 

Pier joint size

 

Spacing between pickets

 

Pier base height

 

The White House fence was redesigned to be taller and more secure.

The White House fence was redesigned to be taller and more secure.

 

Over nine months of public meetings, the National Capital Planning Commission weighed in on the size of the fence piers, the decorative tops, the thickness of the pickets and the spacing between them (a 5½-inch gap was determined to best secure the White House without making it appear imprisoned).

 

Or the renovation to the Federal Reserve Board headquarters, an ongoing project a few blocks from the White House that has attracted the president’s attention, too.

 

New skylights were planned to enclose an atrium in the Eccles Building. But the planning commission wanted to ensure that change wasn’t visible to pedestrians taking in the original 1930s-era building from Constitution Avenue.

 

 

 

 

 

 

This combination of color and luster

Or the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, which opened just south of the White House in 2016 with a signature facade of ornate panels.

 

The Commission of Fine Arts was deeply involved in selecting the bronze-like finish on the panels (after months of debate and in-person testing, it endorsed the “five-coat bronze-colored polymeric painted finish identified as Custom Artisan #3.5”).

The Commission of Fine Arts was deeply involved in selecting the bronze-like finish on the panels (after months of debate and in-person testing, it endorsed the “five-coat bronze-colored polymeric painted finish identified as Custom Artisan #3.5”).

 

 

Such details affect how people passing by experience these iconic places, and how each structure fits into a capital city that has been planned around civic symbols and sightlines since the 1790s. The deliberation is also an expression of democracy, said Carol Quillen, the president and chief executive of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which has sued the administration over the ballroom.

 

“Even if we are slow and we make mistakes and we fight, that process has meaning to us,” Ms. Quillen said. No project belonging to the public should be the vision of just one man, she said.

 

That is, however, how the ballroom has often been described.

 

“President Trump is the best builder and developer in the entire world, and the American people can rest well knowing that this project is in his hands,” Davis Ingle, a White House spokesman, said in a statement. Past administrations and presidents have wanted a ballroom for more than 150 years, he said, and Mr. Trump will accomplish it.

 

But in the sprint to complete it before the end of his term, the addition appears to have compressed the normal design evolution for any project.

 

As recently as October, the president was still increasing the ballroom’s capacity, the kind of decision needed at the concept stage. And the White House has said it plans to begin building in the spring, a timeline that would mean construction documents would have to be prepared even as the design was still under review. (Before a judge demanded in December that the project seek review by these two commissions, the administration appeared poised to skip them entirely.)

 

“The timeline never made any sense to me,” said Thomas Gallas, a former member of the planning commission who long led a design and planning firm. A building on this scale might take its architects and engineers 18 months to two years from initial concept to completed construction documents, he said.

 

Reviews by the planning commission generally follow similar steps, with major projects seeking feedback on initial concepts, then approval of preliminary plans, and then final approval. The public process for the Fed renovations took two years, the African American history museum even longer:

 

 

Timelines do not include staff consultations, which often begin well in advance of the first public meeting.

 

For the ballroom, the planning commission never had a say on the concept design. And this week, it will vote on a combined preliminary and final review, a move more common for antenna replacements or new security bollards. The Commission of Fine Arts did something similar in February.

 

Rodney Mims Cook Jr., the Trump-appointed chair of the arts panel, countered that the group had significant input, including in unofficial meetings with Mr. Trump and in feedback objecting to a large pediment previously planned for the top of the ballroom’s south portico. “We asked him to tone down the porch,” he said. “We asked him to remove the pediments. We asked him for landscape. All of that he did.”

 

Will Scharf, the chair of the planning commission and the White House staff secretary, said his commission had handled the ballroom with the same deliberative pace it has other analogous projects, like an overhaul of the Capital One Arena and the plan for a new R.F.K. Stadium. Those projects, he said, share the ballroom’s sense of urgency and ready funding (characteristics a memorial or museum may not have).

 

“If not for President Trump, his desire to move quickly, and his raising the money to fund this, a project like this could languish for years with no decision or action,” Mr. Scharf said. “And we could still be debating it at N.C.P.C. meetings 20 years from now.”

 

Some big projects in Washington have been bogged down for years. And it’s certainly possible that the White House fence would have been just fine with five inches between the pickets, and that the African American history museum would have looked nice with a Custom Artisan #4 finish instead.

 

But it’s harder to argue that a major addition to the White House needs swifter public scrutiny than its fence (these commissions have meanwhile continued to push back on projects that are not the president’s personal priorities). Many concerns about the ballroom are also not minor ones. And without further work, the details provoking those concerns will become lasting features of the capital.

 

For starters, the ballroom is set to become the dominant anchor at the end of Pennsylvania Avenue, a link planned by Pierre Charles L’Enfant to connect the Capitol and the White House.

 

“The ballroom is literally an imposition between two branches of our government,” said David Scott Parker, an architect on the board of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and one of more than 30,000 people who wrote to the planning commission objecting to the building.

 

The proposed East Wing is about 60 percent larger than the White House residence by floor area. But by cubic volume, and including the porticos, it’s more than three times as large because of the ballroom’s vast ceiling height. Viewed from the south, the ballroom’s size will make it the dominant building of the White House complex, with a portico bigger than that of the residence and a lopsided appearance disrupting any symmetry with the West Wing.

 

The south portico, which was not part of the addition’s initial design, also has no doors into the ballroom. And all of the columns will block views and daylight from inside.

 

During the planning commission review earlier this month, the project’s architect, Shalom Baranes, acknowledged that the south portico was more ornamental than functional.

 

“Is it an absolutely essential part of the program? I would say no, it’s not,” he said. “Really it’s an aesthetic decision to have it there.”

 

That decision, however, is part of the reason the White House driveway planned by the famed landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted must be rerouted, breaking its symmetry (the kind of detail the planning commission might have dwelled on in the past).

 

Inside the East Wing, the ballroom itself is far larger than industry standards suggest is necessary for 1,000 guests (by that standard, it might fit 1,500 people). Mr. Baranes said the extra space was needed to accommodate TV cameras, journalists, security and ceremonial processions. But one result is that events with fewer than 1,000 people could feel empty.

 

The commercial kitchen and first lady’s office suite on the lower level are likewise supersized. And on the second-floor colonnade connecting the ballroom to the executive residence, a wall with masonry niches designed to look like windows will face the north (the direction from which most tourists get a glimpse of the White House). Behind them is a row of bathroom stalls.

 

Many criticisms of the building, Mr. Scharf said, fail to acknowledge that the White House has continually evolved since its beginning. “As our country’s developed, so too has the White House complex,” he said, adding that he would vote on the project this week after having read every one of the letters the commission received. “I see the ballroom project as a natural extension of that history.”

 

Most of the concerns that have been raised touch not on how the building will be used inside, but on how it will face the public. That makes seemingly prosaic matters — the height of the roofline, the jog in the road, the square footage of the ballroom — also symbolic ones.

 

“This is the People’s House, this is not Donald Trump’s, or Joe Biden’s or the next president’s,” said Phil Mendelson, who sits on the planning commission in his role as the chairman of the D.C. Council. He has been a lone objector trying to raise these questions before the commission.

 

Now, barring intervention by the courts, time is apparently up to resolve them.

 

“I still don’t understand,” Mr. Mendelson said, “why the ceiling height has to be 40 feet.”

 

Luke Broadwater contributed reporting.

 

Correction: March 29, 2026

An earlier version of this article misstated a job title for Thomas Gallas. He led a design and planning firm; he’s not an architect.

News Wrap: Judge orders halt to Trump's White House ballroom construction

 

Judge Orders Construction Stopped on Trump’s White House Ballroom

 



Judge Orders Construction Stopped on Trump’s White House Ballroom

 

A federal judge required the president to seek lawmakers’ input and pursue traditional approvals before proceeding with the $400 million replacement for the East Wing.

 

Zach Montague

By Zach Montague

Reporting from Washington

March 31, 2026

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/31/us/politics/trump-white-house-ballroom-construction-ruling.html

 

A federal judge ordered on Tuesday that construction be halted on President Trump’s proposed White House ballroom, to be built in place of the demolished East Wing, saying work must come to a stop until the project receives a go-ahead from Congress.

 

The decision delivered the first meaningful setback to the president’s increasingly audacious efforts to redesign the White House and Washington. It came after months of litigation in front of Judge Richard J. Leon, an appointee of President George W. Bush, who had previously declined to step in.

 

In a 35-page opinion, Judge Leon wrote that Mr. Trump likely did not have the authority to act without consulting Congress to replace entire sections of the White House — changes that could endure for generations.

 

In an opinion punctuated by 19 exclamation points, Judge Leon also reiterated concerns he had raised for months in court: that from the start, the administration has provided shifting and questionable accounts of who was in charge of the project and under what authority private donations could be accepted to fund it.

 

“Unless and until Congress blesses this project through statutory authorization, construction has to stop!” he wrote. “But here is the good news. It is not too late for Congress to authorize the continued construction of the ballroom project.”

 

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Judge Leon wrote that if the White House sought congressional approval, the legislature would “retain its authority over the nation’s property and its oversight over the government’s spending.”

 

“The National Trust’s interests in a constitutional and lawful process will be vindicated,” he added. “And the American people will benefit from the branches of government exercising their constitutionally prescribed roles.”

 

“Not a bad outcome, that!” he concluded.

 

The decision is technically temporary, a preliminary injunction barring further construction while the litigation continues. And Judge Leon paused his own ruling for two weeks to allow the government to appeal.

 

The Trump administration filed that appeal on Tuesday, within hours of the ruling.

 

During a public event at the White House shortly after, Mr. Trump delivered a lengthy defense of the project, insisting that it was no different than previous renovation projects at the campus that were completed without consulting lawmakers, and that it was necessary to make national security improvements.

 

“Congressional approval is not necessary to put up a ballroom,” Mr. Trump said.

 

Judge Leon’s ruling suggested he was satisfied that the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a nonprofit chartered by Congress to guard America’s historic buildings which had sued over the project, had put together a workable challenge following several misfires.

 

In December and again in February, he declined to step in and deferred to the Trump administration, which has argued that an order halting the project would leave an open construction site next to the president’s residence, impairing the ability to do basic work at the White House and even jeopardizing national security.

 

Lawyers representing the government have also asserted the project falls within the president’s personal authority to modernize or improve the White House grounds. Mr. Trump began construction of the project shortly after demolishing the East Wing in October, arguing that a ballroom was needed to host larger events indoors, without spilling onto the South Lawn.

 

But at every turn, Judge Leon had disagreed with Mr. Trump’s position.

 

At several hearings, he implored Yaakov Roth, a senior Justice Department lawyer, to “be serious” and back off claims that the project was comparable to minor renovations of presidencies past, including the addition of a swimming pool or a tennis pavilion. He repeatedly referred to the project’s planning and execution as a “Rube Goldberg machine.”

 

By March, Judge Leon appeared to have lost patience with what he described as shifting positions by the government, particularly surrounding the role the National Park Service has played in approving the project and acting as a financial conduit for private donations supporting it. President Trump has forged ahead with design work as the litigation stalled, working with an architect and periodically showing off renderings of the project. On Sunday, the president flashed the most recent revisions to reporters on Air Force One after a review by The New York Times highlighted elements that architectural experts said appeared careless and betrayed how little the project has been scrutinized.

 

In a winding post on social media reacting to the ruling, Mr. Trump lobbed criticisms at the National Trust, which is also involved in a lawsuit over the president’s attempts to seize control of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

 

“The National Trust for Historic Preservation sues me for a Ballroom that is under budget, ahead of schedule, being built at no cost to the Taxpayer, and will be the finest Building of its kind anywhere in the World,” he wrote.

 

The National Trust has argued that the project was rushed through with no warning to or input from Congress. It also contended that the way Mr. Trump proposed to pay for it was legally problematic.

 

The president says he has raised more than $350 million from personal backers and around two dozen tech, cryptocurrency and defense corporations to fund the building of the structure without government support. A report in November by the group Public Citizen found that two-thirds of the publicly identified corporate donors had received government contracts, collectively valued at more than $275 billion.

 

Judge Leon repeatedly told lawyers involved in the case that he believed the issues would ultimately be settled by the Supreme Court.

 

He waved away one issue raised by Mr. Roth at a hearing last year with a prediction: “You’ll get your chance at the court of review,” he said.

 

Zach Montague is a Times reporter covering the federal courts, including the legal disputes over the Trump administration’s agenda.

Trump takes aim at NATO allies over Iran war | The Wrap with Gillian Joseph

 

Published on 18 March: Robert Pape, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, defines the escalation trap (also known as the "smart bomb trap") as a strategic failure where a military power mistake tactical success for strategic victory.

 


The escalation trap Robert Pape

Robert Pape, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, defines the escalation trap (also known as the "smart bomb trap") as a strategic failure where a military power mistake tactical success for strategic victory.

 

This phenomenon typically unfolds in three stages:

Stage One: The Illusion of Success. A technologically superior force uses precision "smart bombs" to achieve near 100% tactical success—destroying targets, killing leaders, and damaging infrastructure.

Stage Two: Strategic Failure. Despite the destruction, the opponent does not concede politically. Instead, the attacks often fuel nationalism, making the regime and its society more radicalized and resilient against the foreign attacker.

Stage Three: Expanded War. Frustrated by the lack of political change, leaders choose to escalate further—potentially putting "boots on the ground"—rather than reconsidering their strategy.

 

Core Argument

Pape argues that "bombs don't just hit targets; they change politics". While precision strikes are highly effective at physical destruction, they frequently fail to produce stable political outcomes or regime change because they strengthen the enemy's resolve. Pape has recently applied this framework to analyze the U.S.-Iran conflict, warning that reliance on airpower alone risks pulling the U.S. into a protracted and uncontrollable war

Why Israel Might Be In MORE Danger Now That the Iran War is Underway, with Professor Pape

Deciphering the Messages to President Trump Through the Media and What the LEAKS Really Tell Us

Here's What Happens if Trump Pulls Out of the Iran War RIGHT NOW, with Brandon Weichert

Why the world’s missing oil leaves Britain on a “cliff edge” | This is Why

Economist Breaks Down How The Iran War Affects Everything – Not Just Oil

Hegseth's Christian rhetoric raises alarm among military leaders, veterans

Hegseth 'least qualified' for secretary of defense, retired major general says | ABC NEWS

Hegseth says NATO collective defense decision up to Trump

 

During a Pentagon briefing on March 31, 2026, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth explicitly declined to reaffirm the United States' commitment to NATO's collective defense principle, stating that the future of the alliance's security guarantees is a decision that rests with President Donald Trump.

 


Hegseth says that the US will review the Nato alliance towards the future

During a Pentagon briefing on March 31, 2026, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth explicitly declined to reaffirm the United States' commitment to NATO's collective defense principle, stating that the future of the alliance's security guarantees is a decision that rests with President Donald Trump.

Hegseth’s remarks represent a significant shift in U.S. policy and follow growing tensions between the Trump administration and European allies over the ongoing conflict with Iran.

 

Key Points of Hegseth's Statement

Decision Deferred to the President: Hegseth indicated that commitment to Article 5 is a decision for the president.

Frustration with Allies: He criticized France, Italy, Spain, and Britain for failing to provide support during operations against Iran.

Questioning Value: He questioned the alliance's worth, stating allies must "fight for themselves".

Strategic Shift: The Pentagon is moving toward "go-it-alone" planning, prioritizing the Western Hemisphere over traditional ties.

 

Key Points of Hegseth's Statement

Decision Deferred to the President: When questioned regarding Article 5, Hegseth deferred the decision on commitment to President Trump.

Frustration with Allies: He criticized several European nations for failing to assist in operations against Iran.

Questioning the Alliance’s Value: He questioned the relevance of an alliance that does not support the U.S. in critical times.

Trump says the US could end war on Iran in two to three weeks

 

Trump Seeks to Redefine ‘Regime Change’ in Iran War

 



News Analysis

Trump Seeks to Redefine ‘Regime Change’ in Iran War

 

President Trump and his aides have made contradictory statements on whether the United States and Israel have transformed the Iranian government through violence.

 

Edward Wong

By Edward Wong

Edward Wong reports on U.S. foreign policy from Washington, after having covered China and the Iraq war from overseas.

March 31, 2026

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/31/us/politics/trump-regime-change-iran.html

 

Regime change has occurred in Iran. Or it hasn’t. It is a goal of the war. Except it isn’t.

 

Those are some of the dizzying messages that have come from President Trump and his aides in recent days. The phrase “regime change” has flown from lips this week like fighter jets crisscrossing the Persian Gulf.

 

But there appears to be disagreement among top administration officials on what the phrase means, or whether the United States and Israel have achieved it in four weeks of war against Iran.

 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth made an unequivocal declaration about the Iranian government at a news conference on Tuesday: “This new regime, because regime change has occurred, should be wiser than the last. President Trump will make a deal. He is willing.”

 

A common definition of regime change is a forced transformation of government or leadership that results in structural alterations in policies, politics and governance. In Iran, a theocratic leadership that is authoritarian and anti-American — and that continues to wage war — remains in place.

 

On Monday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is also the president’s national security adviser, expressed some doubt in an interview with ABC News about whether anything had really changed in Iran.

 

“The people who lead them, this clerical regime, that is the problem,” he said. “And if there are new people now in charge who have a more reasonable vision of the future, that would be good news for us, for them, for the entire world. But we also have to be prepared for the possibility, maybe even the probability, that that is not the case.”

 

Later, speaking to Al Jazeera, Mr. Rubio made it clear that destroying Iran’s weapons was important because the current leadership — the new regime, as Mr. Hegseth puts it — is an adversary.

 

“I think the best way to stability, given the people who are in charge in Iran, is to destroy the ability of Iran in the future to launch these missiles and these drones against their infrastructure and civilian populations,” Mr. Rubio said, referring to potential targets in the Middle East.

 

He added that “our objectives here from the very beginning had nothing to do with the leadership.”

 

But Mr. Trump opened the war on Feb. 28 by working with Israel to carry out a strike that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, and other top officials. Hours later, he called for Iranians to overthrow their government sometime after the bombing stopped. The uprising, which was promised to Mr. Trump by Israeli leaders, has not materialized, but the president is saying mission accomplished on regime change.

 

In fact, he said, the United States has been so successful that it has ended not just one, but two Iranian regimes.

 

“We’ve had regime change, if you look, already because the one regime was decimated, destroyed. They’re all dead,” Mr. Trump told reporters on Sunday aboard Air Force One. “The next regime is mostly dead. And the third regime, we’re dealing with different people than anybody’s dealt with before. It’s a whole different group of people. So I would consider that regime change.”

 

To emphasize the point, he said, “Regime change is an imperative, but I think we have it automatically.” On Tuesday afternoon, the president reiterated that he had “knocked out” two Iranian regimes, one after the other.

 

Mr. Trump’s talk of the destruction of two regimes appeared to refer to the initial attacks that killed Mr. Khamenei and other senior officials and also injured his son Mojtaba Khamenei, who was later appointed by a group of clerics to be Iran’s new supreme leader. Iranian and Israeli officials say the son suffered leg injuries, and he has not appeared in public during the war.

 

The younger Mr. Khamenei is considered a hard-line ally of a powerful arm of the Iranian military, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. The government in Tehran vows resistance and continues to fight the United States, Israel and Arab partners, and to block energy shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting the global economy.

 

“There has been personnel change in Iran, not regime change,” said Karim Sadjadpour, a scholar of Iran at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. “Different men with the same ideology.”

 

Mr. Trump’s remarks about regime change have muddied the waters. But his military actions and coercive economic warfare against a handful of nations — Iran, Venezuela and Cuba — are aimed so far at decapitating leadership to put in power someone who will accede to U.S. demands, rather than effecting a wholesale transformation of the political system.

 

The president’s aim is to create client states by coercing regime compliance, part of a greater project of resurrecting empire. And he constantly talks about a template: the U.S. military’s violent incursion into Venezuela in January to seize Nicolás Maduro, the country’s president, and Mr. Trump’s subsequent negotiations over oil and other matters with the acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, who like Mr. Maduro is a hard-line leftist.

 

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said at a news conference on Monday that the United States and Israel had to kill the older Mr. Khamenei and some of his aides after it proved too difficult to do diplomacy with them. Those previous leaders “are now no longer on planet Earth,” she said, “because they lied to the United States and they strung us along in negotiations, and that was unacceptable to the president, which is why many of the previous leaders were killed.”

 

Mr. Trump’s braggadocio over accomplishing what he calls regime change is fairly new. In 2016, when he was running for president, he criticized the wasteful U.S. “forever wars” in Iraq and Afghanistan, saying that “we must abandon the failed policy of nation-building and regime change.” In May, he gave a speech in Saudi Arabia in which he said that “in the end, the so-called nation builders wrecked far more nations than they built, and the interventionalists were intervening in complex societies that they did not even understand.”

 

Despite his embrace of war and military violence, Mr. Trump’s instinct to refrain from committing the United States to completely transforming hostile nations appears to persist for now.

 

The president’s remarks this week asserting that leadership decapitation is regime change can be interpreted as an attempt to redefine the phrase so that he can say his original war goal has been met.

 

“The administration as a whole seems to be moving away from deep regime change as a goal of the war,” said Rosemary Kelanic, the director of the Middle East program at Defense Priorities in Washington. “A real regime change war in Iran would require boots on the ground — and a lot of them — and Trump wisely doesn’t want to commit that level of effort when the costs and risks far outweigh the benefits.”

 

Edward Wong reports on global affairs, U.S. foreign policy and the State Department for The Times.