Analysis
‘Enemy of
Europe’? How Trump’s push for Greenland spooked far-right allies
Jon
Henley
Europe
correspondent
Leaders
and voters who formerly applauded US president’s aims have been growing
increasingly uneasy
Trump’s
subsequent disparaging remark that Nato allies’ troops ‘stayed a little off the
frontlines’ in Afghanistan has only deepened the divide.
Tue 27
Jan 2026 11.16 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/27/trump-greenland-europe-far-right-analysis
Donald
Trump’s attempted Greenland grab has driven a wedge between the US president
and some of his ideological allies in Europe, as previously unstinting
enthusiasm and admiration collides with one of the far right’s key tenets:
national sovereignty.
Trump’s
subsequent disparaging remark that Nato allies’ troops “stayed a little off the
frontlines” while fighting with US forces in Afghanistan has only deepened the
divide, piquing far-right patriotic sentiments and prompting an avalanche of
criticism.
The US
president last week stepped away from his drive to seize Greenland, pledging he
would not take it by force or impose tariffs on nations opposing him. Faced
with a fierce backlash, he also appeared to walk back his swipe at non-US Nato
troops.
But for
radical-right populists – who lead or support governments in a third of the
EU’s member states, are vying for power in others, and who saw in Trump a
powerful ally for their nation-first, anti-immigration, EU-critical cause – he
is increasingly a liability.
The
divide could jeopardise the goals of his administration’s national security
strategy, which set a US policy objective of “cultivating resistance” to
Europe’s “current trajectory” by working with “patriotic allies” to avert
“civilisational erasure”.
Just over
a year ago, Europe’s far-right leaders were effusively welcoming Trump’s return
to the White House. A few months later, they gathered in Madrid to applaud his
America First agenda under the banner “Make Europe Great Again”.
More
recently, some have been having second thoughts. Polling consistently shows
Trump is hugely unpopular in Europe. Most Europeans, including many far-right
voters, see the US president as a danger to the EU and want a stronger bloc.
Polling
published on Tuesday by the Paris-based European affairs debate platform Le
Grand Continent suggested that between 18% and 25% of far-right voters in
France, Germany, Italy and Spain consider Trump as an “enemy of Europe”.
Asked to
define his foreign policy, between 29% and 40% of supporters of the National
Rally (RN), Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Brothers of Italy (FdI) and Vox
parties chose “recolonisation and the predation of global resources”.
Perhaps
most remarkably, between 30% and 49% of voters for far-right parties in the
four countries said that if tensions with the US over Greenland were to
increase further, they would support the deployment of European troops to the
territory.
Trump’s
expansionism, and his willingness to use economic clout to achieve it, puts
Europe’s far right in a tough position. Leaders in France, Germany and Italy
have all criticised his plans, some sounding very like the mainstream
politicians they despise.
In a
European parliamentary debate last week, typically pro-Trump, far-right MEPs
overwhelmingly backed freezing ratification of an EU-US trade deal because they
were so uneasy at his approach, calling it “coercion” and “threats to
sovereignty”.
Jordan
Bardella, Marine Le Pen’s protege and the president of France’s RN, who only
weeks ago described Trump as “a wind of freedom”, called the US president’s
pledge to seize Greenland “a direct challenge to the sovereignty of a European
country”.
He told
the debate: “When a US president threatens a European territory using trade
pressure, it’s not dialogue, it is coercion.” Greenland was “a strategic pivot
in a world returning to imperial logic”, he said. “Yielding would set a
dangerous precedent.”
Normally
a fierce critic of alleged EU overreach, Bardella instead urged the bloc to
unite and fight back with the toughest weapons in its arsenal. “This isn’t
escalation, it’s self-defence,” he said. “The choice is simple: submission or
sovereignty.”
Alice
Weidel, a co-leader of Germany’s AfD, which had hailed Trump’s national
security strategy as the dawn of a “conservative renaissance” in Europe, said
in Berlin that he had “violated a fundamental campaign promise – not to
interfere in other countries”.
Even
Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK and a Trump loyalist, described as “a
very hostile act” a US president “threatening tariffs unless we agree he can
take over Greenland … without even getting the consent of the people of
Greenland”.
Wary of
retaliation, far-right and populist leaders who are in office rather than
bidding for it were not quite so outspoken. Italy’s “Trump-whispering” premier,
Giorgia Meloni, criticised the deployment of European troops to Greenland, but
even she eventually said she had told the US president in a call that his
Greenland threats were “a mistake”.
Viktor
Orbán, Hungary’s illiberal prime minister and perhaps Europe’s leading Trump
fan, dodged the question. “It’s an in-house issue … It’s a Nato issue,” Orbán,
who has long vaunted his friendship with the US president, said of Trump’s
Greenland plans.
Likewise,
Poland’s nationalist, Trump-aligned president, Karol Nawrocki, said last week
that Greenland tensions should be solved “in a diplomatic way” between
Washington and Copenhagen, without recourse to a broader Europe-wide debate.
Nawrocki
stressed the US was still his country’s “very important ally” and he called on
western European leaders to tone down their objections to Trump’s conduct. In
the Czech Republic, too, the prime minister, Andrej Babiš, warned against a
transatlantic row.
But if
some leaders were wary of openly criticising Trump over Greenland, there was
near-universal outrage at the US president’s comments on Nato allies’ troops in
Afghanistan, which Meloni described on social media as “unacceptable”.
The
Italian prime minister said her country had borne “a cost that cannot be called
into question: 53 Italian soldiers killed and more than 700 wounded”. She said
Italy and the US were “bound by a solid friendship” but that “friendship
requires respect”.
Nawrocki
said there was no doubt that his country’s soldiers – more than 40 of whom lost
their lives in Afghanistan – were heroes. “They deserve respect and words of
gratitude for their service,” he said.
Babiš was
equally critical. Fourteen Czech soldiers had died in Afghanistan, the Czech
prime minister said, adding that he knew Trump “likes to provoke and doesn’t
mince words, but what he said about the mission in Afghanistan was way off the
mark”.
Analysts
said it was too soon to say if the divide would last. Daniel Hegedüs, of the
German Marshall Fund, said domestic electoral considerations meant many
far-right parties would be forced to respond to any continued threats to
sovereignty. But he said Trump and his European ideological allies “can always
unite forces again, around issues where they can cooperate”, such as
immigration.
Pawel
Zerka, of the European Council on Foreign Affairs, said far-right leaders would
not lose out. “Far-right leaders in France, Germany and Britain are unlikely to
lose points,” Zerka noted. They “demonstrated timely criticism” of Trump’s
excesses, while mainstream leaders and the EU “generally failed to display
strength, unity and assertiveness”.
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