Trump’s NATO PUNISHMENT LIST Just Leaked — Canada Is Next …

Right now, inside the White House, Donald Trump is reportedly preparing to punish NATO allies he believes failed him during the Iran conflict. Instead of leaving NATO, he may weaken it from within—shifting U.S. troops away from “unhelpful” countries and rewarding those who supported him.
This puts Canada in a dangerous position. Under Mark Carney, Canada refused to join the Iran war, choosing a neutral stance. Now, with the crucial CUSMA review just weeks away, Trump could tie military loyalty directly to trade deals.
Canada isn’t powerless. It’s using leverage—Arctic security, critical minerals, and even a major fighter jet deal—to negotiate. At the same time, U.S. domestic politics, especially in swing states like Michigan, are putting pressure on Trump’s aggressive trade stance.
The likely outcome? Not a full collapse, but a fragile, transactional relationship where security and trade are tightly linked.
Bottom line: the old U.S.–Canada partnership is changing fast—and what happens next could reshape North America for years.