Fact-checking Trump’s NATO news conference

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"Fact-Checking President Trump's Claims at NATO Summit"

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During a recent news conference at the NATO summit in the Netherlands, President Donald Trump made several inaccurate statements regarding the war in Ukraine, inflation in the United States, and the fight against ISIS. One of the notable claims he made was regarding the military strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, asserting that they had rendered the sites 'obliterated.' However, this assertion has been contradicted by an early assessment from U.S. intelligence, which indicated that while the strikes had impacted Iran's nuclear program, they had not completely destroyed its core components. This assessment suggests that the military action may have only delayed Iran's nuclear ambitions by a few months, with ongoing intelligence evaluations likely to provide further insights into the strikes' effectiveness.

Trump's comments included a denial of a previous assertion that he could end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours, claiming it was made in sarcasm. However, a CNN investigation revealed numerous instances where he made similar pledges seriously, undermining his claim of sarcasm. Additionally, Trump criticized Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for not lowering interest rates, falsely stating that there was 'no inflation' in the U.S. In reality, the annual inflation rate was recorded at 2.4% in May, an increase from 2.3% in April, highlighting a significant discrepancy in Trump's economic statements. Furthermore, he reiterated his claim that ISIS was defeated during his presidency in just a few weeks, despite the fact that the liberation of the ISIS caliphate was officially declared in 2019, more than two years into his first term. These inaccuracies underscore the ongoing challenges of fact-checking statements made by the former president during public appearances.

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Unanalyzed Article Content

President Donald Trump made false claims about the war in Ukraine, US inflation, and the past fight against the ISIS terror group during his Wednesday news conference at the NATO summit in the Netherlands.

Trump also repeated his unproven assertion that the US’ weekend military strikes on Iranian nuclear sites had left them “obliterated.” As CNNreported Tuesday, an early US intelligence assessment found the core components of the program had not been completely destroyed and that the strikes had likely set back Iran’s nuclear program only by months. (The US continues to collect intelligence on the impact of the strikes and later assessments could come to different conclusions.)

Here is a fact check of some of Trump’s assertions on Wednesday.

When a reporter reminded Trump that he had previously promised to end Russia’s war on Ukraine in “24 hours” but had later said he had been speaking sarcastically, Trump said, “Of course it was sarcastic.”

It was not sarcastic.

When Trump claimed in April that he had made the promise “in jest,” CNN looked into this assertion – and found 53 examples in which Trump pledged on the campaign trail, in an entirely serious tone, manner and context, that he would end the war either within 24 hours of his return to the White House or even sooner than that, as president-elect.

Here is the list of examples.

Trump again criticized Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for not immediately lowering interest rates. Trump said, as he has before, that “we have no inflation.”

That’s not true. The US had an annual inflation rate of2.4% in May, an uptick froma 2.3% annual rate in April. That April rate was the lowest since early 2021, and lower than some economists expected for April after Trump imposed significant new tariffs, but it’s not “no inflation” whatsoever.

On a month-to-month basis, US consumer prices increased 0.1% in May and 0.2% in April.

Trump repeated hisregular assertionthat, during his first presidency, “We beat ISIS in a matter of weeks.” He added, “I was told it would take four to five years, we did it in a few weeks.”

In fact, the so-called ISIS “caliphate” was declared fully liberated more than two years into Trump’s first presidency,in 2019, not in “weeks.”

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Source: CNN