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“"He's a computer, focus, management, finance, and business."”
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and over-sip-sinsorting Café for every match. Alépa Premium Café is already in 1929. And here's the Cuba-Capsule Machines in Diner Chibu-Fiale and of Chibu-DE. "One of the top NATO commanders, committee chair, Dragoony,
just blasted Donald Trump in front of the world during a powerful speech in Singapore.
This speech by Commander Dragoony focused on the fragmentation of the world that has been caused by Donald Trump's attack on the rules-based order. Following Commander Dragoony's speech, we also heard from Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles echoing the same sentiment of Donald Trump ripping up a rules-based order. Now, they weren't using Donald Trump's name, but it's obvious who they were referring to.
Similarly, we then heard from the Prime Minister of Denmark, Meta Friedrichsin, who called out Donald Trump for his threats against Greenland and the threats against the overall sovereignty of other NATO nations with a call-by-prime Minister for all European countries to make sure that they build strong militaries and that these mid-powers join forces to become major global superpowers in a current law of the jungle that's now been created
by people like Trump, by Putin, and by Xi Jinping, and across the world. Let me show you what went down here. This was from Dragoony's speech, Commander Dragoony of NATO,
“talking about the fragmentation that exists and that if you want to prepare for peace now,”
you gotta prepare for war in order to keep the peace. Really powerful language from him here,
play this clip. The world is fragmented, fragmented, whatever it calls, but fragmentation is not destiny. The measure of our generation will be whether we allow that fragmentation to accelerate, or whether we did the harder work of building deeper and broader partnership. NATO answer is clear, we are adapting, we are investing, and we are reaching outward to partners in this region and beyond to civil society, to industry, to every element of our
society that has a stake in the outcome, because nobody can do it all alone. The security of the euro-authentic and the Indo-Pacific is interconnected and individual, as I already said. The partnership we build on, we build and strengthen with you are the foundation of the stability our citizen will depend on tomorrow. There is an old saying from my native land, which is Italy, and I'll tell you originally, see this patchen para Bellu. That was from
the J. T. Renatus for the century after that, so 1500 years of history and civilization. In English, it was mentioned yesterday, if you want peace, prepare for war.
The lesson identified that we keep on repeating. Maybe it is time with finally learning
together so we can move forward. I'll show you another clip right here of commander Djragoni who talks about more of this instability taking place, more of this conflict taking place, more of the fragmentation, play this clip. New is the simultaneous fracturing of the stability, institutions, and peaceful prosperity of the past decades. And the deliberate exploitation
Of that fracturing by revisionist authors.
the militarization of space and cyberspace, the manipulation of information environments
“to corrode public trust. And the return of the largest scale conventional warfare to the European”
continent. I want to share more from commander Djragoni of NATO in just a moment, but given the similarities of that part of his speech, with that of Australia's defense minister Richard Marles,
Marles gave an incredible speech and what Marles focused on as well as the importance of a
rules-based order. He says it benefits everyone when you follow the rules of clear message also directed towards Trump. And when he also in this speech talked about how they were all of these underwater cables, which basically power the entire internet. There are 15 cables that Australia relies on for 99% of its internet connectivity. And what's actually going on behind the scenes
“and now that nobody's talking about is that there's a shadow war taking place. It seems where”
there are hostile powers that are testing NATO, testing Trump, and he's utterly failing, testing the allies of the US by dropping anchors in the sea bed and severing the connectivity
of these critical internet cables that exist. And it's a major part of his speech. Let let me
play for you what he says though about that. Let's play this clip. The center of competition is a more fundamental proposition whether the international system will be governed by rules applied universally or by power applied selectively. And that question matters most for the states that are not great powers. When the rules apply, smaller states have agency. When the rules yield to power sovereignty becomes as others have put it the purview of the powerful. And no state
in this room today, whatever its size is will serve by that outcome. The international rules based order is imperfect. It was built by imperfect actors. It has been applied inconsistently.
And it has sometimes been invoked by powerful states to protect their own prohibitives.
South East Asia understands that more than most. But we are so much better off with it than without it. And it has been through our region's great benefit that the United States has chosen to invest in that order based on an enlightened conception of its own self-interest. The task before us, all of us, including the great powers, is the renovation of that order not its dismemberment. And in the maritime domain, that renovation is urgent. The sea bed is becoming a battlefield.
The shadow fleet is becoming a weapon. The choke points through which our region's prosperity flows are under a pressure they had not experienced in the modern era. Australia is investing to meet that challenge. We are investing in our own capabilities in our alliances in our partnerships across the region. And we are committed to the region's security architecture and dialogue so exemplified by the gathering this weekend. Because we understand
that security in our region is indivisible. The what threatens our neighbors ultimately threatens each of us. And what we can build together, we cannot build alone. The sea connects our great region. And what we must all decide is whether that connection will be governed by the laws we have built together or contested by the tactics of those who prefer the alternatives.
“Well Australia's answer to that question is clear. Rules are essential. And operating by them”
is the pathway to regional peace, security, and prosperity. Thank you. I'll go back to Commander Dragoni over here over in NATO. More talk about resiliency. Let's play this clip. Being resilient means to be able to absorb shock. And this is not enough anymore. Our ambition should be anti fragility. Partnership defense and societies so strengthened by lessons that will not even feel those shocks.
So no unnecessary duplication, of course. But open, door to a certain degrees of strategic
Redundance.
And as we look to the NATO summit in Ankara in July, as military, we expect that also the
“partnership agenda will advance. In all aspects. Alongside the capability agenda, we expect”
concrete steps of interoperability on industrial cooperation and on the role of society frameworks that give depth to our security architecture. Our military advice is crystal clear. The nation's gathering in Ankara have an opportunity to set the terms for a more secure, peaceful world. Underpinned by our shared commitment to deter some defense and our share
interests in stability and prosperity. And here he talks about NATO becoming a more independent
entity and clearly what he's referring to is independent from the United States here. Play this clip. From a military point of view, what we are now focused on in NATO is translating this increased funding and investment into real capabilities, because we cannot deter anybody by waving money in the air. To make our alliance strong and something we are increasingly good at in NATO, we have a professional accountable and strategically informed process.
The NATO defense planning process or NDPP. The NDPP gives countries in NATO concrete targets for the capabilities that they need to expect it to deliver with their investment. And you could say that NDPP is how we turn our billions into battalions and battleships. Look, if you're in this community, you're paying attention. You know what's happening and a lot of what's happening. It's directly affecting your Medicare. Plans are being discontinued.
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that is out there for chapter. And so I'm so glad to be affiliated with it. I'm so glad you're all having great experiences. So call 82 Medicare today to speak with chapter. That is 82 Medicare and feel confident in your Medicare coverage. And here Dr. Goni talks about that fragmentation. Let's play it. In this context, one of the most concrete arenas in which partnership delivers strategic value is defense industry. The fragmentation of the global order has a direct industrial
correlate. Supply chains under pressure, export restriction tightening, technological decoupling
“accelerator. Security partnerships are an essential instrument for mitigating that industrial”
fragmentation. They enable joint procurement, common standards, share research and development, strategic autonomy with the trusted interdependence among like mind and the most needed interoperability. When allies and partners produce a keep-and-build to the same standards and train to the same doctrines. But also works on data, cloud, AI, cyber, logistics standards, the coalition that result outperform one assembled form incompatible parts under pressure.
And here he talks more about the NATO meeting and how the importance of NATO staying together is here. Play this clip. Just days ago, May 19, we met with all the 32 NATO chief of defense.
The quality of the strategic coordination, the frankness of the exchanges and...
purpose in that room, were crystal clear. An alliance doing the hard work of adaptation, under pressure and succeeding at it. Beyond that band of brothers and sister, though, as chairman of the military committee, I invest considerable time engaging also with partners. To me, this is a strategic investor because these partners share our interest in peace and security. Then we heard from Denmark's Prime Minister Metta Friedrichsen and here she
blast Donald Trump. Let's play this clip. The NATO future. First of all, it was a very difficult
situation for the Kingdom of Denmark because we need everybody to respect that we are sovereign state. As you said, our territorial integrity has to be respected. The US president was very outspoken
“about his desire, about the Greenland. I think we responded also very clear. We had a public discussion”
and then we agreed to have this high-level working group. It's still working. Of course, we would like to have even closer cooperation with US. More from Friedrichsen, right here, about a mistake that was made. She says, by Denmark and by Europe, generally, lots of other countries. Post-World War II, post-Called War is everybody believed that the United States would have their back and be this benevolent superpower based on ideals, values and principles of the rules based order.
That the United States wrote. So we thought the people who wrote the rules would follow the rules and then we noticed that they were deviating from it Trump won. And now, in the second Trump regime, the United States has abandoned it and we've been left holding the bag. Remember, Denmark purchased some F-35s that they've learned to regret. Canada saw that and go, "Ooh, we got to get our hands on the greapons." And now we know that it seems that Canada may order
three to four times as many F-35s, three to four at many times of the greapons as they will with
the F-35s that we were expected to get with the F-35s. Here's what Prime Minister Friedrichsen
“had to say of Denmark. Let's play it. And I think all of us are stronger because of the alliance.”
So I will never suggest to weaken NATO, but I believe that Europe should be able to defend itself, not because of what US are thinking about the future or their political decisions, but simply because a Europe that is not able and willing to defend itself, what is that? So for me, it's also a question about identity. I think we made a mistake after the end of the cold war reducing our military. I mean, what we are spending and hoping that if anything happened,
then US would come and help you. It's simply the wrong way of looking at yourself and your countries and your borders. So I will do what I can to support NATO and to keep us together,
“but I believe that Europe needs to rearm totally and be totally able to defend ourselves. And of course,”
that will require a lot of spending on capabilities and so on and as you know, I mean, Denmark are using more than 3% now. Now with all of this going on as well, you have President Zelensky of Ukraine calling out the Trump regime for refusing to do any deal with Ukraine regarding a lot of this drone technology and Zelensky's like, you realize we're trying to help NATO. Yes, sure, we need patriots, patriot missiles. We need dads and patriot missiles because we just don't have
that capacity, but we have the best drone technology and we know that modern warfare is all about drone technology and drone interceptors. And so Zelensky's like, we've gone to all of these countries, they want our drone technology, but Donald Trump refuses to say, yes, to this deal that we want to
basically give it to them. And this should be beneficial to everybody. Watch what Zelensky said.
And now keep in mind, commander Djragoni, keep in mind Friedrichsen, keep in mind, the Australian Defense Minister as well when I'm reading this to you. Zelensky goes, we wanted to conclude the
First drone deal with the United States.
We agreed to the way they wanted to test, train within use our systems in the air on land. And let's see, but we still don't have a bilateral drone deal, a big framework document to drone deal we have are with some countries in the Middle East in Europe. And now we are preparing a big drone deal with the EU. I hope we reach the same agreement with our American partners like Count on it. American companies have advanced AI technologies that we don't have
in turn. We have many things that you don't have due to our extensive experience on the battlefield.
“I think this cooperation can be huge. The most powerful of its kind in the world.”
We need to negotiate, not just talk about it. Take the necessary steps and do it as quickly as possible. For this, we need President Trump to say, yes, as our editor in chief, Ron Philip Kowski said, let's talk about what's really going on here. I mean, you're competing with Don Jr's drone company. What the hell do the Ukrainians know about drones compared to Don Jr, right? Don Jr, Eric, they have their drone company, their drone company seems to be getting the deals
from the United States government. It seems, it seems a lot of reporting on that. I'm sure you've seen the reporting on that as well. Come on, what are we doing? What are we doing here, folks? Zelensky also talked about how we are trying to intercept all Russian drones, even when some of them are going in the direction of other countries like Romania, Maldova, Poland or the Baltic States. If we can't, we immediately notify our partners and try to help them. Russia uses drones
to pressure NATO countries and gauge the reaction. This is their typical message. Don't help Ukraine.
“I think there should be a stronger response from a United NATO. Putin is comparing this reaction”
to what he saw in previous years and he's also testing air defenses of NATO countries bordering
Russia or Belarus. Are they capable of intercepting all the missiles and drones? Again, powerful
words indeed right there and contrast those words over there to Trump saying we left all of Iran's military intact. He says we left him intact. We want them to have their military. He says because the IRGC are the moderates, Trump says. He's refusing to take the drone deal from Ukraine. He's tarnished our relationship with the NATO. Obviously, you heard Commander Djugoni and he's out there saying that he's he kept the Iran military in place. Didn't he say he destroyed the military?
Now he says the military is in place because the IRGC are the moderates. Interesting. Here play
“this clip right here. There may be a totally gone hundred percent. Their Air Force is totally”
gone one hundred percent. Their military we sort of left it alone because we think that their military is somewhat moderate. They have other people that aren't moderate. We've taken them out. We've taken different forms of leadership. We've actually left their military alone. People would be surprised to hear that because mistakes have been made in wars where you wipe out everybody
and then you have a country that's 40 years can never rebuild. And with this breakdown
of a rules-based order, you had Netanyahu earlier talking about how the idea of the Israeli army expanding deeper into Lebanon, our forces, cross powerful obstacles. They seize commanding terrain and capture the viewport ridge and the castle there. And now my instruction is to deepen and expand our hold on areas that were under his bullets control. We are initiating action. We are operating on all fronts in Syria and Gaza and in Lebanon. It will take time but we will complete the mission
and notice that is clearly being done as well in order to prevent a deal between the United States and Iran because one of Iran's preconditions to a deal is that there be a permanent security guarantee in Lebanon and Israel's pushing deeper into Lebanon right now and blowing up tires, sir, the city there, blowing up South Bay Route, blowing up Bay Route. It's horrific to travel cities that are going on there. And so that gives you the full kind of update of everything that's
going on. Let me know what you think. Hit subscribe. Let's get to 7 million subscribers and thanks
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