President Donald Trump criticized German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Tuesday after remarks by the chancellor about Iran’s nuclear posture, saying Merz had effectively suggested it was acceptable for Iran to possess nuclear weapons.
Posting on his social media platform, the president warned that if Iran obtained a nuclear weapon, "the entire world would be held hostage." He added that he is taking measures on Iran that, in his view, other countries or previous administrations should have implemented earlier.
"No wonder Germany is doing so poorly, both Economically, and otherwise," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Merz's comments, made on Monday during an address to students in Marsberg, centered on what he described as Iranian tactics in dealing with U.S. officials. The German chancellor said Iran’s leadership was managing to humiliate the United States by arranging meetings that produced no substantive results, specifically noting visits by American officials to Pakistan that ended without agreement.
According to Merz, Iranian negotiators have been adept at avoiding real concessions, allowing American envoys to travel to Islamabad and return without tangible outcomes. He said the situation amounted to the humiliation of an entire nation, calling particular attention to the role of the Revolutionary Guards.
Merz also said he did not see a clear U.S. exit strategy in the confrontation with Iran. Those remarks underscored existing tensions between Washington and its European NATO partners, a rift that the chancellor suggested had been growing in contexts including Ukraine and other policy areas.
The exchange highlights public disagreements at the highest levels of government over how to respond to Iran and reflects strains in transatlantic relations. Both leaders framed the issue in stark terms: Trump through a warning about global security risks if Iran gained nuclear weapons, and Merz by questioning the effectiveness of recent U.S. diplomatic efforts.
Details of ongoing policy steps referenced by the president were not elaborated on in his social media post. Likewise, Merz's critique focused on the conduct and consequences of recent diplomacy rather than proposing a specific alternative course of action.
The dispute between the U.S. president and the German chancellor signals continuing debate among allies about strategy and objectives in dealing with Iran, with potential implications for diplomatic coordination within NATO.