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  1. Months of [Donald Trump](https://inews.co.uk/topic/donald-trump?srsltid=AfmBOor0CzCqGTFk7VCja-4pGSUGyhL8H-knmzswcLCmoc6iyDZU1wPA&ico=in-line_link)‘s insults, mockery and military aggression appear to have finally pushed Europe to its limits, with leaders now openly moving against the US President.

    Since the [US and Israel began their war against Iran](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/netanyahus-scorched-earth-endgame-spells-disaster-trump-4303080?ico=in-line_link), European countries have lambasted the President’s “war of choice” and refused to assist him, while France, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, and Austria have all closed or partially closed their airspace to American military aircraft.

    On Thursday the French President, [Emmanuel Macron](https://inews.co.uk/topic/emmanuel-macron?srsltid=AfmBOooRcC5rvO6pPIHX8mv4NG-vlijeWksFnQ1ua-NIj_taWqvupnhh&ico=in-line_link), usually tactful in dealing with the irascible Trump, lashed out after the American’s derogatory remarks about his relationship with his wife, [Brigitte](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/brigitte-macron-prove-gender-france-never-happen-britain-4004645?ico=in-line_link).

    At a private lunch event on Wednesday, Trump, imitating a French accent, said: “I call up France, Macron – whose wife treats him extremely badly. Still recovering from the right to the jaw.”

    Trump’s comments referred to [a video from last May](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/macron-video-wife-brigitte-slap-joke-3715060?ico=in-line_link) showing Brigitte appearing to shove her husband.

    Macron said Trump’s mocking remarks were “neither elegant nor up to standard” and that “they don’t deserve a response”. He added: “You want to be serious, you don’t say every day the opposite of what you said the day before.”

    He went on to criticise Trump’s approach to the war: “This is not a show. We are talking about war and peace and the lives of men and women.” He also suggested Trump ought to reduce his daily commentary on its progress. “And maybe you shouldn’t be speaking every day. You should just let things quieten down,” he said.

    Macron’s stand came after the Spanish Prime Minister, [Pedro Sánchez](https://inews.co.uk/topic/pedro-sanchez?srsltid=AfmBOorV96iM8M_YJQDUhGvTiY7WCJiCta2R_-OOGp8e9aGQU0X6cbAG&ico=in-line_link), called on the global community not to play “Russian roulette with the destiny of millions” by engaging in the war. He has called the war a “violation of international law” and an “unjustified and dangerous military intervention”.

    Sánchez was the first European nation to publicly refuse to grant the US access to its airbases. In response, the US threatened to cut off trade to Spain.

    # Europe is moving against Trump – and there’s no going back

    Europe’s attitude to Trump’s US is unlikely to return to what it was, with officials no longer speaking about it as an ally, experts say. Sébastien Maillard, Associate Fellow at Chatham House: “I hear language I used to hear about China being used towards the US. People saying Europe needs to ‘de-risk’, calling them a ‘systemic rival’. That’s official diplomatic language used about China.”

    He added: “European leaders feel more and more comfortable moving against Trump because there’s no moving back to the relationship there was before.”

    He said the current commentary from the Continent had been caused directly by a series of anti-European policies, [insults by Trump’s administration](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/trumps-insults-embarrassment-him-uk-4329501?srsltid=AfmBOopi027PaDTZAqqfeDksRb68rW96pNzKJy-vurQRbCvyxUdjpqJE&ico=in-line_link) and threats to interfere with politics in Europe, culminating in his [threats to Greenland](https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/greenland-fearing-trumps-next-move-why-he-wants-arctic-4148708?srsltid=AfmBOop_wiNGX8GMN_24r_CHBah9x2lBVMRVyNzv7TXIrE8jayagsbuE&ico=in-line_link). This had brought home the need for Europe to take a stand.

    “When you’re touching on political home territory there is really now a pressing need to get bolder. You’re talking about your own sovereignty and your own democracy – it’s not just a matter of tariffs and steel and aluminium,” he said.

    He added: “Trump went too far and crossed all the red lines. He went to the heart of Europe’s interests.”

    Trump’s contempt for America’s traditional allies has already backfired on him, experts say. European and Asian nations have refused to help the US reopen the Strait of Hormuz, pointing out that his war is a “war of choice” on which none of them were consulted.

    “President Trump’s attempts to dominate the world now appear to be pushing the United States to the fringes of world politics, where other countries and regions are no longer looking to the US for leadership, and now see it as a disruptive and malignant influence,” said Dr David Andersen, associate professor in US politics at Durham University. “This is remaking the international order in ways that are difficult to predict.”

    Andersen noted the rapidity of the relationship’s decline. “It is somewhat impressive that President Trump has managed to exhaust nearly 75 years of goodwill built up between the US and Europe, but it seems that he has,” he said.

    He added: “With Trump’s imposition of tariffs, his demands that Nato countries increase defence spending, his entering into a war with [Iran](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/netanyahus-scorched-earth-endgame-spells-disaster-trump-4303080?ico=in-line_link) without consultation, and his continued threats to remove American involvement with Nato and European protection more generally, Europe is growing tired of the endless demands and assumption that they will submit to them.”

    # Standing up to Trump is a political win

    Politicians on the continent also have something to gain domestically by standing up to Trump. A recent poll suggested that almost a third of voters across Europe’s six largest countries now saw the US as a threat, leaving politicians who had been close to Trump in the past looking vulnerable.

    That includes the Italian Prime Minister, Georgia Meloni, who recently lost a referendum to reform her country’s judicial system. Some analysts have suggested the vote was as much of a popularity contest as a chance to decide the complicated issues on the ballot paper.

    Maillard said: “Even Meloni’s had to be careful because some see her closeness with Trump, at a moment when the war in Iran is widely unpopular, and say she’s too close to Trump.”

    Jim Moran, Associate Senior Fellow at the Centre for European Policy Studies and former EU ambassador, said: “Getting too close to Trump is now seen as an electoral liability in many EU countries [as well as in the UK].”

    Trump’s attitude has expedited Europe’s moves to build links with other regions of the world. Moran pointed to the growing number of trade deals the EU was forging with countries alienated by the Trump administration.

    “Witness the acceleration of major new trade agreements with partners who feel the same way, notably [South American trade bloc] Mercosur and – just last moth – Australia,” he said. “Both of these agreements had been blocked for years until recently, but the growing unreliability of the US as an ally has forced both sides to look elsewhere for sustenance.”

    # Europe’s options are limited

    However, Europe will be dependent on the US for the foreseeable future. While it may be able to look elsewhere economically, it cannot separate itself from the US entirely because it relies on it for everything from security and intelligence to energy and technology.

    This, said Maillard, is unlikely to change for at least a decade. “It’s just a case of Ukraine that keeps Europeans onside and the fact we still rely on the US for defence,” he said.

    The US has been the backbone of the [Nato military alliance](https://inews.co.uk/topic/nato?srsltid=AfmBOoq-jKO8o_CdKAjJUgxryiivmu4rE62V7aRetYTS_B5YsdGbivBO&ico=in-line_link) since its founding, and the threat of US military intervention has deterred aggression against its members for more than 75 years. [Repeated threats to withdraw the US](https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/security-insiders-fear-putin-europe-trump-nato-4329787?ico=in-line_link) imperil the security of Nato’s members.

    On Wednesday, Trump repeated his threats to withdraw from Nato after his appeals to European allies to join the war in Iran went unanswered.

    Philip Bednarczyk, Director of the German Marshall Fund’s Warsaw Office, does not believe the current situation spells the end for Nato. “But Europe is starting to question its bullet-proof nature,” he said. “Nato is still the backbone of European defence, but there’s a shyness there.

    However, there are still splits in Europe when it comes to the best way to deal with the US. Right-wing governments like that of Viktor Orbán in Hungary, which maintains close ties with Russia and has proven a [thorn in Brussels’ side over numerous issues](https://inews.co.uk/news/world/viktor-orban-antics-threaten-ukraine-europe-2804996?srsltid=AfmBOooT0j73X1rGZKkVSBLDXh1h7Eu0KCsV4db1pR4Zf2jJEAemajg0&ico=in-line_link), have been [singled out for favour by the Trump administration](https://inews.co.uk/news/trump-playbook-turbocharge-right-wing-populism-europe-3368870?ico=in-line_link).

    Dr Daniel S Hamilton, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute said: “Responses to Trump vary greatly. A focus on Trump distracts from the fact that there is no European strategy toward Iran, the Middle East, China, Russia or other major issues. European responses to Trump will remain fragmented, and Trump will exploit those differences – as will [Vladimir] Putin and Xi [Jinping] – by playing the Europeans off against each other. It’s easy to do.”

    Right now, said Bednarczyk, neither faction seems to truly want to dissolve the relationship. “They’re bickering and blaring at each other but neither seems to want to. Maybe that’s a good thing. The tough part is how to see past this.”

  2. OptimisticRealist__ on

    About time. Sick and tired of that shithole country bullying the rest of the world and dragging the planet down with em.
    Those bible thumping, science denying freedom lovers can kick rocks for all i care.

    About time we move off the americans and let them fend for themselves. Hell, replace the dollar as reserve currency and let that potemkin village of a country crumble to pieces. The world would be better for it.

  3. ninjastyle_dk on

    As we say in Denmark „Fååååk him“. Good on Macron for standing up – need rest to say „No more“.

  4. FatFaceRikky on

    Very nice, unfortunately we have few cards. Without American LNG it’s lights out in Europe, also we need them for the Ukraine effort. As it is, we can’t replace them.

  5. Didn’t realise anyone liked Macron, but it seems people love anyone that „stands up against Trump“ 🤡

  6. A_Lion_Thief44 on

    Boring.

    Wake me up when the EU and the UK actually do something toward our dipshit-in-chief and this rancid country of ours. Otherwise, they are nothing more than growling and barking dogs who will get in line when the master tugs on the leash hard enough. Glorified vassal states is all that they have been since 1945.

  7. Extension_Canary3717 on

    „Clap Back“ = usa/epstinian regime , doesn’t even need a new president if Trump stops posting for a day EU will reset their feelings about USA

  8. local_ghost_80 on

    Dear Americans, this is what an unpopular, controversial and generally unsuccessful European president looks like. Not even the same species.

  9. Behemothheek on

    The whole world has had it with Trump. Hopefully he’s hit with that realization in the upcoming midterms.

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