News
Analysis
Trump Has
Long Disdained Europe’s Elites. Now, It’s Official.
A new
White House policy document formalizes President Trump’s long-held contempt for
Europe’s leaders. It made clear that the continent now stands at a strategic
crossroads.
Jason
Horowitz
By Jason
Horowitz
Reporting
from Madrid
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/06/world/europe/trump-europe-strategy-document.html
Dec. 6,
2025
Updated
10:22 a.m. ET
The Trump
administration has not exactly kept its low regard for Europe secret. President
Trump has long portrayed European allies as freeloaders that fail to pay enough
for their own security and argued that the European Union was “formed to screw
the United States.”
Now, that
hostility is official White House policy.
The Trump
administration issued a national security strategy paper this week that called
for European nations to take “primary responsibility” for their own defense,
indicating that the United States should no longer guarantee Europe’s security.
It accused the European Union of stifling “political liberty,” warned that some
NATO members risked becoming “majority non-European,” and said the U.S. should
align with “patriotic European parties” — code for Europe’s far-right
movements.
The
blunt, bracing and official nature of the document added injury to incessant
insult, making clear to mainstream European leaders that they stand at a
strategic crossroads. On a paper stamped with the president’s seal, the
trans-Atlantic alliance was being openly denigrated by the superpower across
the ocean that has ensured European security in the 80 years since World War
II.
“It’s up
there at whitehouse.gov staring the world in the face,” Charles A. Kupchan, who
was senior director for European Affairs on the National Security Council in
the Obama administration, said of the document. “And that makes it very hard to
digest,” added Mr. Kupchan, now professor of international affairs at
Georgetown University.
The now
explicit prospect of the United States’ withdrawing its protection came days
after Russia — whose talking points on European countries, some experts said,
were echoed in the strategy document — warned that it was ready for war with
Europe. It made more urgent a debate within the continent about whether its
long-term interest lay in holding on to America regardless of the humiliations,
or in facing a new reality, arming up and going it alone.
“Is this
going to be the moment of European awakening?” said Nathalie Tocci, a professor
at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University,
who has worked as an adviser to key European Union officials and wrote one of
its strategy reports.
Anticipating
a fissure in trans-Atlantic relations, European governments have in recent
years tried to wean themselves off American military might by increasing their
own defense spending and cross-border military cooperation. Several have
introduced or expanded military service, with Germany, one of the countries
best placed to defend the continent in a major land conflict, passing
legislation on Friday to increase its forces by nearly 50 percent. And the
European Union now has a commissioner for defense whose primary job is to boost
regional arms production and cooperation.
But the
reality remains that Europe — lacking real military integration, key
capabilities and ammunition — is hugely reliant on the United States and on an
administration that professes to not like it much. A change, some argued, was
necessary.
“Till now
there was no, let’s say, systemic response,” said Romano Prodi, a former
president of the European Commission, the executive branch of the European
Union. He said he hoped the bloc would “elaborate a policy” that made it more
assertive.
“This
does not mean to break the links with the United States,” he said. “This means
to have a voice.”
But the
lack of strong public outcry from Europe’s leaders about the strategy document
indicated that they had gotten used to Mr. Trump’s tantrums — it was, Mr. Prodi
said, “Nothing new: dividing Europe and despising Europe” — and had decided the
best response was to let him cry it out and then hold him and the alliance
close. Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s top diplomat, exemplified that
approach on Saturday, saying in response to the document that the U.S. was
“still our biggest ally.”
Mr.
Kupchan, the professor of international relations, said that Europe’s leaders
understood that biting the Trump bullet was the smarter, and perhaps only,
long-term play. He said the document made it harder for them to stomach the
humiliation and concessions necessary to keep Mr. Trump close to their position
on the major issues of the day, from trade policy to Europe’s defense of
Ukraine in its war with Russia.
For
Europe, analysts said, the challenge was preserving both the process of
integration that had made it rich and peaceful, and the American security
blanket that had kept it safe. In the 80 years since World War II, European
integration, pursued in significant part to limit Germany, was “one of the
great accomplishments of modern times,” Mr. Kupchan said.
“Anybody
who wants to dismantle Europe should just pick up any history book of the 20th
century,” he said, adding “or any history prior to 1945.”
But
dismantling seems to be precisely what the Trump administration wants to do,
analysts said.
Ms.
Tocci, the professor at Johns Hopkins University, said that supporting
right-wing parties antagonistic to the European Union would divide and weaken
the continent, leaving a “fractured Europe which is easily colonizable” by the
globe’s great powers.
The
effort to divide Europe is hardly new. Russia has been doing it for more than a
decade, boosting euroskeptic and often far-right parties who want to weaken the
European Union, strengthening Moscow’s hand. Some experts said they considered
the United States national security strategy a facsimile of the Russian
playbook.
“It’s
striking because that is very similar to language which you’ll find in the
analogous Russian national security document,” said Timothy D. Snyder, a
prominent scholar of totalitarianism and Russia.
Mr.
Snyder added that by suggesting that good foreign policy was about balancing
between great powers rather than upholding the rule of law, “the U.S. national
security document is now tilting in the basic ideological direction of the
Russian one.”
He also
said the paper sounded similar to “flat-out Russian propaganda” in its
assertions that a majority of Europeans wanted the war in Ukraine to end no
matter what, and that it was continued by out-of-touch elites.
Mr.
Snyder also echoed other analysts when he said he suspected that the Trump
administration’s sub rosa goal in weakening Europe was to free American tech
companies from encumbering European regulation, an objective it has previously
stated.
Mr.
Prodi, the former E.U. Commission president, argued that the Trump
administration’s policy prognoses violated the very sovereignty it preached, by
“entering in a very inappropriate way into the internal policy of other
countries.”
But some
of Europe’s sovereigntist right-wing parties welcomed the intrusion and the
long-awaited recognition from the White House.
“All
these things are our message, our diagnosis, so we’re happy,” said Hermann
Tertsch, a member of the European Parliament with Spain’s far-right Vox party,
who said that during previous administrations, “we were very afraid” of the
United States.
Under Mr.
Trump, however, it was a source of comfort, Mr. Tertsch said, adding, “It’s a
new era.”
Jason
Horowitz is the Madrid bureau chief for The Times, covering Spain, Portugal and
the way people live throughout Europe.


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