Italy’s
Meloni strains to hold her coalition together over Ukraine and EU rearmament
The Italian
prime minister has kept her government surprisingly intact for years — but
pressure is building as Donald Trump pushes Europe to pick sides.
April 3,
2025 4:17 am CET
By Ben
Munster, Elena Giordano and Giovanna Faggionato
Europe's
massive rearmament plans — and the EU's role in Ukraine — are turning into a
splitting political headache for Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni as she
grapples to hold her right-wing coalition government together.
As leader of
the EU’s No. 3 economy, Meloni, a committed transatlanticist, is conspicuously
not buying into more gung-ho rhetoric from France and Germany that Europe’s
time has come to build global heavyweight militaries and to replace America as
the main guarantor of Ukraine’s security against Russia.
In part,
Meloni’s caution on European rearmament reflects her sincere belief that Rome
should not be making a binary choice about siding with the EU against U.S.
President Donald Trump.
But there’s
also a significant domestic political calculus at play. On Meloni's right
flank, Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini is seeking to revive his political
fortunes by playing to widespread voter skepticism about a major peacekeeping
role within Ukraine (only 6 percent of Italians think that’s a good idea, polls
suggest), as well as to broad concern over the effect of increased military
spending on Italy's already squeezed finances. Meloni doesn't want to be seen
as being pulled toward a warzone by the ambitions of Paris and Berlin.
The prime
minister's challenge is that her coalition has to balance the interests of the
far-right League party of Salvini, an admirer of Trump and Russian President
Vladimir Putin, with those of another major partner, the center-right Forza
Italia party of her other deputy, Antonio Tajani, who is far more pro-European
and has even publicly supported a European army.
While
Meloni's government is unusually stable by Italian standards, she has to
contain the sparring between Salvini and the EU-oriented Tajani. The two have
clashed over the idea of a European army, with Salvini even scoffing that such
a force should never be led by "madman" French President Emmanuel
Macron.
These
political strains are most discernible in Meloni’s shifting rhetoric over the
past weeks. She has downplayed her previous confidence that Ukraine will
achieve victory, raised serious doubts about the EU's plans to rearm, and
poured cold water on the prospect of European countries going it alone without
U.S. firepower.
"I
don't think I have used the word 'victory' with respect to the war in
Ukraine," Meloni told the Italian parliament last month, contradicting her
earlier stance.
She went on
to denounce one of the European Union's founding texts and to decry the
"childish" false dichotomy between Europe and Brussels, and continued
to push a controversial idea that would see NATO security guarantees extended
to Ukraine without the country joining the alliance.
Her
EU-friendly allies in the ruling coalition insisted in remarks to POLITICO that
Meloni remains a committed European at heart and that her recent comments were
mostly about throwing a bone to Salvini. But the big question is whether she
has nevertheless underestimated the extent to which Trump is truly turning his
back on Europe.
“The way
Trump has acted these past two months, how can you act as a mediator?” asked
Giovanni Orsina, professor of contemporary history at Luiss University in Rome.
“And now she risks going from being friends with both sides, to becoming an
enemy of both.”
Rearmament
reticence
While she is
still committed to Europe, Meloni's change in rhetoric does reflect Rome's
genuine skepticism of the pace and scale of the EU's rearmament plans,
according to Italian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to speak
freely.
The main
issue is the European Commission's proposed bloc-wide rearmament plan, which
would consist of €150 billion in cheap loans and greater fiscal flexibility of
up to €650 billion for countries that don't have enough fiscal headroom.
Italy has
pushed for more private sector involvement in the rearmament plan, which it
fears would otherwise lead to a surge in borrowing costs at a time when it is
under EU orders to shrink its exorbitant debt pile. | Gints Ivuskans/AFP via
Getty Images
According to
two people familiar with the government's position, Rome is aware that it is
weaker and smaller than France and Germany, and has a more realistic view of
Europe's undeveloped defense sector and its limited chances against Russia
without the U.S., whose extensive supply chains are deeply interwoven with the
bloc's military capabilities. As POLITICO reported last month, Italy has also
pushed for more private sector involvement in the rearmament plan, which it
fears would otherwise lead to a surge in borrowing costs at a time when it is
under EU orders to shrink its exorbitant debt pile.
Like the
United Kingdom, Italy's close relationship with the U.S. has reduced its
dependence on its European neighbors, said one person familiar with the
thinking in Rome, adding that the country does not want to be at the
"mercy" of France and Germany should the transatlantic alliance fall
apart.
While France
has "always had a cold relationship with the United States ... no Italian
government has ever questioned the relationship with the U.S. on defense,"
Italian General Leonardo Tricarico, who was military advisor to several prime
ministers, told POLITICO.
After
Italy's defeat in World War II, added the person quoted above, "we learned
forever that there is not a place for us as a global superpower. We can play a
role everywhere in the world, but we can do it only if we are together with the
U.S. Certainly we must also do it within the EU — but not only within the
EU." A transatlantic breakup would also make it harder for both Europe and
the U.S. to tackle China, the official added.
Allies are
seemingly already aware of Italy's discomfort. In an interview with leading
Italian daily Corriere della Sera over the weekend, European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen sought to reassure Rome that its leading defense
firm, Leonardo, would "benefit greatly" from the defense spending
push and play a significant role in a rearmed Europe. On top of that, the
latest update to the EU rearmament plans — which includes provisions for
private-sector financing — already goes some way toward appeasing Rome's
concerns.
But none of
that is likely to reassure Meloni fully. In the view of Stefano Stefanini, a
former top Italian diplomat and NATO ambassador, Meloni's actions also reflect
a faith, perhaps misplaced, that the transatlantic alliance can still be saved,
and that its demise has been exaggerated. Center-left lawmaker and former
European Affairs Minister Enzo Amendola agreed, telling POLITICO that the
premier's reconciliation efforts would leave Italy in a "no man's land
between the EU and the U.S."
Nevertheless,
it's a view shared by Italians across the political spectrum."I doubt
there will ultimately be a complete rupture between the United States and the
European Union,” said Danilo Della Valle, an MEP with the left-populist 5Star
Movement. European rearmament is, after all, what Trump is asking for, he
added.
One of the
people familiar with the government’s thinking went so far as to argue that
tensions with the U.S. were being exploited by opportunistic French and German
leaders — and that a rearmed Germany was actually more dangerous than Russia or
the U.S.
A
spokeperson for the Italian government declined to comment.
Coalition
clashes
But such
geopolitical concerns are ultimately outweighed by local ones for Meloni,
particularly Salvini's increasing inclination to veer off-piste.
The
firebrand's star has been overshadowed by Meloni in recent years, and a League
congress in Florence next month threatens to expose deep divisions within the
party's own ranks. As a result, Salvini is taking pains to display his populist
credentials and revive support among his flagging base, and has drawn criticism
for unilaterally engaging with the U.S. administration — including an
unauthorized call with Europe-hating Vice President JD Vance last month — and
for his repeated calls for Meloni not to back the EU defense plans.
To be sure,
Salvini is unlikely to blow up the coalition anytime soon, having learned the
risks of political showboating after his disastrous exit from a coalition
government with the 5Star Movement in 2019, League Senator Claudio Borghi told
POLITICO. The politician added that Meloni’s shift on Ukraine has largely
appeased League lawmakers, and that the premier — if forced to choose — would
attempt to deal with the U.S. bilaterally, as Rome sought to do during Trump's
previous term.
But even as
Meloni scrambles to reclaim her territory on the right, her recent actions also
suggest she may be feeling out pro-European alternatives to the garrulous
Salvini, according to Francesco Galietti, a former Treasury official and
founder of the political risk consultancy Policy Sonar. Over the weekend Meloni
caused some surprise by praising her centrist political rival Carlo Calenda,
who leads the small Azione party that is broadly loathed by the far-right — and
is a vocal supporter of EU rearmament. "This is her hedge against
Salvini," argued Galietti.
At an Azione
conference, Meloni denied she was looking into a formal alliance with Calenda,
even if the quasi-endorsement of the EU-friendly leader was a reminder of her
own continued support for the bloc.
But as
Trump's shadow looms large, the limits of that support are being sorely tested.
"If she
comes to a point where she has to choose between supporting and not supporting
Ukraine, she's too committed to Ukraine to drop it," said Stefanini, the
diplomat. "But she will try to avoid making any choice — as long as she
can."
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