The
united West is dead
European
leaders should heed their voters and ensure the bloc remains a pole within its
own sphere of influence — not a bystander in someone else’s.
Opinion
January
15, 2026 7:01 am CET
By Mark
Leonard
Mark
Leonard is the director and co-founder of the European Council on Foreign
Relations (ECFR) and author of “Surviving Chaos: Geopolitics when the Rules
Fail” (Polity Press April 2026).
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-united-west-is-dead/
The
international liberal order is ending. In fact, it may already be dead. White
House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said as much last week as he gloated
over the U.S. intervention in Venezuela and the capture of dictator Nicolás
Maduro: “We live in a world … that is governed by strength, that is governed by
force, that is governed by power … These are the iron laws of the world.”
But
America’s 47th president is equally responsible for another death — that of the
united West.
And while
Europe’s leaders have fallen over themselves to sugarcoat U.S. President Donald
Trump’s illegal military operation in Venezuela and ignore his brazen demands
on Greenland, Europeans themselves have already realized Washington is more foe
than friend.
This is
one of the key findings of a poll conducted in November 2025 by my colleagues
at the European Council on Foreign Relations and Oxford University’s Europe in
a Changing World research project, based on interviews with 26,000 individuals
in 21 countries. Only one in six respondents considered the U.S. to be an ally,
while a sobering one in five viewed it as a rival or adversary. In Germany,
France and Spain that number approaches 30 percent, and in Switzerland — which
Trump singled out for higher tariffs — it’s as high as 39 percent.
This
decline in support for the U.S. has been precipitous across the continent. But
as power shifts around the globe, perceptions of Europe have also started to
change.
With
Trump pursuing an America First foreign policy, which often leaves Europe out
in the cold, other countries are now viewing the EU as a sovereign geopolitical
actor in its own right. This shift has been most dramatic in Russia, where
voters have grown less hostile toward the U.S. Two years ago, 64 percent of
Russians viewed the U.S. as an adversary, whereas today that number sits at 37
percent. Instead, they have turned their ire toward Europe, which 72 percent
now consider either an advisory or a rival — up from 69 percent a year ago.
Meanwhile,
Washington’s policy shift toward Russia has also meant a shift in its Ukraine
policy. And as a result, Ukrainians, who once saw the U.S. as their greatest
ally, are now looking to Europe for protection. They’re distinguishing between
U.S. and European policy, and nearly two-thirds expect their country’s
relations with the EU to get stronger, while only one-third say the same about
the U.S.
Even
beyond Europe, however, the single biggest long-term impact of Trump’s first
year in office is how he has driven people away from the U.S. and closer to
China, with Beijing’s influence expected to grow across the board. From South
Africa and Brazil to Turkey, majorities expect their country’s relationship
with China to deepen over the next five years. And in these countries, more
respondents see Beijing as an ally than Washington.
More
specifically, in South Africa and India — two countries that have found
themselves in Trump’s crosshairs recently — the change from a year ago is
remarkable. At the end of 2024, a whopping 84 percent of Indians considered
Trump’s victory to be a good thing for their country; now only 53 percent do.
Of
course, this poll was conducted before Trump’s intervention in Venezuela and
before his remarks about taking over Greenland. But with even the closest of
allies now worried about falling victim to a predatory U.S., these trends — of
countries pulling away from the U.S. and toward China, and a Europe isolated
from its transatlantic partner — are likely to accelerate.
All the
while, confronted with Trumpian aggression but constrained by their own lack of
agency, European leaders are stuck dealing with an Atlantic-sized chasm between
their private reactions and what they allow themselves to say in public.
The good
news from our poll is that despite the reticence of their leaders, Europeans
are both aware of the state of the world and in favor of a lot of what needs to
be done to improve the continent’s position. As we have seen, they harbor no
illusions about the U.S. under Trump. They realize they’re living in an
increasingly dangerous, multipolar world. And majorities support boosting
defense spending, reintroducing mandatory conscription, and even entertaining
the prospect of a European nuclear deterrent.
The
rules-based order is giving way to a world of spheres of influence, where might
makes right and the West is split from within. In such a world, you are either
a pole with your own sphere of influence or a bystander in someone else’s.
European leaders should heed their voters and ensure the continent belongs in
the first category — not the second.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário