
Are Europe's ties with United States set to worsen?
But the wind was blowing in that direction even before Donald Trump's return to power.
The world's leading superpower believes it has better things to do than to keep paying for a Europe in economic decline, seeing it as freeloading on defence and not doing much for it commercially in return.
Since Trump's re-election, the tectonic shift has become an earthquake, particularly over Europe's exclusion from peace talks on Ukraine between Washington and Moscow.
The Republican leader has said the EU was "formed in order to screw the United States" while his Vice President JD Vance has plunged the future US military presence in Europe into doubt.
At the same time, Trump acolyte Elon Musk called German Chancellor Olaf Scholz "an incompetent fool".
"There was already a trajectory of distancing that (Joe) Biden embodied politely and (Kamala) Harris would have embodied politely," said historian Frederic Fogacci, from the Charles de Gaulle Foundation in Paris.
"Trump's approach is more brass, more abrasive," added Kelly Grieco, a US foreign and defence policy specialist at the Stimson Center think-tank in Washington.
'Frustration' in Washington
"There's enormous frustration on this side of the Atlantic about (defence) because there's repeatedly been a warning that Europe needs to step up and prepare for this kind of moment," she said.
"They haven't prepared anything."
Europeans only began the debate about security without US support under pressure, and are still trying to keep Washington on-side.
"It's no wonder that Americans look down on Europeans as dependents," said Stephen Wertheim, from the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
"Europeans present themselves as dependents. If Europe provides for its essential defence needs, that might just breed self-respect and inspire a new respect in Washington and the wider world," he added.
On Ukraine, the European approach is "not necessarily helpful", said Grieco.
"It seems to be still very focused on some kind of US security guarantee for Ukraine and pushing the administration for that," she said.
"The more they're pushing the administration in that direction, the more it is creating more of a widening gap between the two sides."
'Freedom fries'
Tensions between the two allies are not new. In 2018, during Trump's first term, the New York Times mused: "Is the Trans-Atlantic Relationship Dead?"
"Let's not forget 'freedom fries'," said Grieco, recalling the time in 2003 when the US Congress renamed French fries because of France's refusal to back the war in Iraq.
There was also friction during the Cold War, with the Suez Crisis a symbol of "geopolitical schooling" by Washington, said Fogacci.
The United States and the Soviet Union demanded the withdrawal of French, British and Israeli troops from the Suez Canal, weakening the influence of London and Paris in the Middle East in the process.
"During the Cold War, we operated in exactly this way. Moscow and Washington, in the end, settled the issue between themselves," said geopolitics scholar Frederic Encel.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, "the Americans were wary of a Europe that was integrating too widely towards the east", said Fogacci.
"With the war in the former Yugoslavia, they took precedence over Europeans divided by old historical interests and without sufficient military capacity."
Europe and US are 'natural allies'
In his book "The Grand Chessboard", published in 1997, former US president Jimmy Carter's national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski said: "Europe is America's natural ally.
"It shares the same values; partakes, in the main, of the same religious heritage; practices the same democratic politics."
Nearly 30 years later, the waters are more muddied.
"Across Europe, free speech, I fear, is in retreat," Vance said in February, citing as an example the refusal of Germany's mainstream parties to govern along with the far-right.
Grieco said there was now a clear difference between the two sides on values and the way to express them.
That contrasted the situation in the 1980s, said Fogacci, when "the neoconservatives had an idea of democracy quite compatible with the European one, their equation being that political liberalism leads to economic liberalism and vice versa".
For Trump, "a country has weight through what it knows how to do, what it can offer or its capacity to cause harm," he added.
"It's an 'ahistorical' vision, reducing democracy to decontextualised principles."
Trump, he added, "does not look at states but land and resources".
Convergence is still possible on the question of China, said Grieco.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Local Norway
08-08-2025
- Local Norway
Why Norway could face higher US trade costs than the EU
Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Moldova, and Switzerland are the only European countries to have worse trade arrangements with the United States under tariff regimes now in place, according to new information obtained by business newspaper Dagens Næringsliv ( DN ). Norwegian goods are now subject to a general 15 percent tariff, on par with those levied on European Union (EU) nations, alongside an additional 50 percent surcharge on Norwegian steel and aluminium exports, under new US tariffs which took effect on Thursday. The tariffs on Norway come as the United States began charging higher tariffs on goods from dozens of trading partners Thursday. READ MORE: Norway among countries impacted as Trump tariffs take effect The Norwegian Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries confirmed to DN that Norway would be hit with a general 15 percent tariff, but that this is on top of the regular rates applied to so-called most favoured nations (MFN). These existing duties are projected at 3.4 percent in 2025, meaning an average rate of 18.4 percent for Norwegian goods, and potentially even higher for certain product groups, according to DN's report. Advertisement By contrast, the EU has secured an "all-inclusive" deal capping tariffs at 15 percent, with no additional charges. Conservative Party politician and former foreign minister Ine Eriksen Søreide told DN she is concerned that the government has not informed businesses that the new tariff comes in addition to the existing MFN duty. This could create greater uncertainty for Norwegian exporters and also leaves Norway with a significantly worse deal than the EU, Søreide said. The new US tariffs could have major consequences for businesses in northern Norway, business group the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (NHO) Arctic meanwhile said on Friday. 'Many local communities in northern Norway depend on exports. We have seen strong growth in export-oriented industries here in the north, which makes us highly vulnerable to any form of trade war,' regional director Sigrid Ina Simonsen told broadcaster NRK.


Local Norway
07-08-2025
- Local Norway
Norway among countries impacted as Trump tariffs take effect
Norwegian goods are now subject to a general 15 percent tariff, on par with those levied on European Union (EU) nations, alongside an additional 50 percent surcharge on Norwegian steel and aluminium exports, under new US tariffs which took effect on Thursday. The tariffs on Norway come as the United States began charging higher tariffs on goods from dozens of trading partners Thursday, in a major escalation of President Donald Trump's drive to reshape global commerce in America's favour. As an executive order signed last week by Trump took effect, US import duties rose from 10 percent to levels between 15 percent and 41 percent for a list of trading partners, news agency AFP reported. One year ago, tariffs on Norwegian goods stood at 1 percent. Norway's Trade Minister Cecilie Myrseth last week said that negotiations with the United States were still ongoing, ahead of the scheduled introduction on tariffs. "Norway remains in dialogue with the US authorities with the aim of reaching an agreement between our two countries," she said in a statement. However, the planned 15 percent US tariff on Norwegian imports is now a reality. READ ALSO: What are the US tariffs on Norway, and how could they affect you? Advertisement Other countries facing significant increases include Switzerland, previously seen as a close US partner, which has been hit with a 39 percent tariff. Switzerland's government, which failed to convince Trump not to impose the stinging tariff, was set to hold an extraordinary meeting on Thursday. India is also being hit with a 50 percent tariff, while Syria faces a 41 percent tariff. Laos and Myanmar will each be subject to a 40 percent tariff, and Canada, a major US trading partner, will face 35 percent. Many imports from economies including Japan and South Korea as well as the European Union now face a 15-percent tariff, even with deals struck with Washington to avert steeper threatened levies. Georgetown University professor Marc Busch told news agency AFP he expects US businesses to pass along more of the tariff bill to consumers. An earlier 90-day pause in higher "reciprocal" tariffs gave importers time to stock up, he said. But although the wait-and-see strategy led businesses to absorb more of the tariff burden initially, inventories are depleting and it is unlikely they will do this indefinitely, he told AFP. "With back-to-school shopping just weeks away, this will matter politically," said Busch, an international trade policy expert.


Local Norway
31-07-2025
- Local Norway
Norway must brace for high US tariffs, prime minister warns
"We are having constructive talks with the US, and I am happy about that," Støre told Norwegian news bureau NTB on Wednesday. "But the way the Americans have set this up, we must be prepared for a tariff rate that may be high." Under the current proposal from President Donald Trump's administration, Norwegian goods are facing a 15 percent tariff. Norway is pushing to reduce the rate to 10 percent. As of August 1st, a range of new tariffs will be imposed on most of Washington's trading partners -- some of them heavy and some sector-specific, such as a 50 percent tariff on products made with copper. READ ALSO: Norway gets temporary reprieve from US tariff hikes EU exports are now set to face tariffs of 15 percent on most products -- higher than customs duties before Trump returned to the White House, but much lower than his threatened 30 percent. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said some agricultural products would be exempt under the agreement struck Sunday, though she did not specify which. Advertisement France's President Emmanuel Macron said this week the European Union had not been "feared" enough in negotiations with the United States towards a trade deal, pledging to be "firm" in follow-up talks. "It's not the end of it," Macron told ministers during a cabinet meeting. "Europe does not see itself enough as a power yet. To be free, you have to be feared. We were not feared enough." With reporting by AFP