Trump
thinks he wants a Europe without the EU — he shouldn’t
If the
bloc were to crumble, rest assured Americans would come to regret it very
quickly.
A Europe
without the EU wouldn’t be a thriving continent of “sovereign” nation-states at
all. |
Opinion
December
24, 2025 4:02 am CET
By
Dalibor Rohac
Dalibor
Rohac is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington DC.
https://www.politico.eu/article/us-donald-trump-thinks-wants-europe-without-eu-should-not/
“Be
careful what you wish for, lest it come true,” Aesop’s fable goes.
And any
American cheering alongside the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump,
calling for the dismantling of the EU on the grounds that it’s a bureaucratic
Moloch guilty of “civilizational erasure,” should take that lesson seriously.
Setting
aside the blatant contradiction between the MAGA movement’s putative veneration
of national sovereignty and the high-handed manner in which the administration
is dispensing advice to Europeans on how to organize their continent or whom to
vote for, the anti-EU animus on full display in Washington suffers from a
deeper problem.
Namely, a
Europe without the EU wouldn’t be a thriving continent of “sovereign”
nation-states at all.
In
reality, divorced from the European project, the continent would resemble
something akin to the Western Balkans following the former Yugoslavia’s
disintegration: A place where all old grievances suddenly spring back to life.
And that would be especially true if the EU’s imagined dissolution were to take
place at the hands of the NATO movement’s supposed allies — the so-called
“patriotic” forces in European politics.
After
all, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s long-term political project is all
about restoring “Greater Hungary” as it existed prior to the 1920 Treaty of
Trianon, and at the obvious expense of his country’s immediate neighbors like
Romania, Ukraine or Serbia.
Then
there’s the fact that bordering nationalist firebrands may have their own ideas
in mind. Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vučić, for instance, venerates Slobodan
Milošević, a dictator who launched murderous wars to keep Serbia dominant in
the Balkans. Would he simply cede Subotica — or Szabadka in Hungarian — to his
fellow strongman in Budapest?
And what
about the views of those like Diana Șoșoacă, a rather colorful member of the
European Parliament who wants to annex “historically Romanian” territories like
Northern Bukovina from Ukraine?
The main
reason why these, and many other, forms of historic revisionism are kept under
a tight lid has to do with the achievements of the European project, and that
includes things like free passportless travel and a high standard of rights for
minorities. Take the EU away, and a whole host of previously unthinkable events
become possible — from wars to “frozen” conflicts of the sort that Russia and
Serbia maintain in places such Transnistria or Kosovo.
No doubt,
in such an event, the bigger players would have their say too — like an already
emboldened Russia that’s being egged on by the Trump administration in Ukraine
and is rather keen to demonstrate the hollowness of NATO’s Article 5; or even a
Germany under the possible leadership of the far-right Alternative for Germany
party, which Trump ally Elon Musk urged to move beyond the country’s historic
guilt.
What
could go wrong, really?
The
suggestion that the EU represents a dead end in Europe’s civilization betrays a
profound ignorance of the continent’s history.
Since the
fall of the Roman Empire, Europe has always been balancing cultural and
political unity and diversity, and its succession of unwieldy quasi-federal
institutions are a part of that. Far from being an aberration, the EU continues
in the tradition of the Holy Roman Empire, the Hanseatic League or the
Polish-Lithuanian Republic.
Of
course, one may argue that what happens in Europe should be Europe’s problem,
not America’s. But that’s, at most, an argument for disengagement, including a
withdrawal of the U.S. security umbrella from Europe — not for the current
efforts by Musk and Washington to put their finger on the scales of European
politics.
Plus, the
case for U.S. disengagement is weak and ahistorical. Both in 1917 and in 1941,
Americans learned the hard way that while they might not be interested in a
European war, a European war could very well be interested in them. In the
former case, the threat to U.S. interests came from German naval attacks
against U.S. vessels heading to and from Britain. In the latter, Germany
declared outright war after its emboldened ally Japan struck Pearl Harbor.
America’s
postwar policy toward Europe, which always included broad support for the
project of regional economic integration, wasn’t a product of naiveté or the
“stupidity” of previous U.S. leaders. It was guided by an effort to prevent
another European war. And that policy was a stunning success, coinciding not
only with an unprecedented period of peace and prosperity in Europe but also
with America’s rise as the world’s uncontested global power — in part, thanks
to the transatlantic relationship.
Culture
wars are always thrilling, and set against the backdrop of a virulently
anti-European national security strategy, the one being waged against the EU by
the Trump administration is no exception. But while it’s all fun and games
right now, if the EU were to crumble at the hands of Russia and Trump’s U.S.,
rest assured Americans would come to regret it very quickly.

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