Trump flub confuses Iranian terror threat with storm system
U.S. President Donald Trump walks with Air Force Commander Colonel Angela Ochoa after stepping off Marine One to board Air Force One to depart for the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S., June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

President Donald Trump stumbled through a bizarre press conference aboard Air Force One Tuesday, apparently confusing potential terror attacks with storm systems

Responding to questions about possible Iranian retaliation following recent strikes on nuclear sites, Trump launched into a confusing critique that appeared to conflate terrorist "sleeper cells" with meteorological phenomena. "Biden let a lot of supercells into the United States," Trump declared. "He was an incompetent president. He had no idea what he was doing."

The president's remarks seemed to be a muddled attempt to discuss national security threats, accidentally using the term "supercells" — which typically refers to rotating thunderstorms — instead of "sleeper cells," the term describing hidden terrorist operatives.

Trump continued his criticism, stating, "It was gross incompetence. Among everything else, he let a lot of supercells in, many from Iran. But hopefully we'll take care of them. What Biden did to this country should never be forgotten."

The comments came as Trump traveled to the Netherlands for a NATO summit in The Hague, where tensions were already high due to ongoing global conflicts. Adding to the diplomatic complexity, Trump's comments about NATO's mutual defense Article Five raised further eyebrows when he cryptically responded to questions about the alliance's commitments.

"There's numerous definitions of Article Five, you know that, right?" Trump told reporters. "But I'm committed to being their friends. I'm gonna give you an exact definition when I get there. I just don't wanna do it on the back of an airplane."