Pedro Sanchez—Spain’s current leader—comes across as a deeply controversial figure. Critics argue his government is burdened by corruption, and in Europe he’s often portrayed as Israel’s most aggressive opponent. But the narrative goes further: to his detractors, he’s not just clashing with foreign allies, he’s acting against Spain’s own national interests. They claim he operates through uneasy alliances—with separatist movements, figures linked to Venezuela’s dictatorship, Islamist networks tied to Iran, and the broader Foro de Sao Paulo, a space where leftist and communist groups are said to overlap with criminal and even terrorist elements.