MAGA
influencers want to sculpt Europe in Trump’s image
Bannon
and other MAGA influencers now get to sharpen their stakes with the
encouragement of U.S. government policy — and their sights are set on the
continent.
Unpacked
December
29, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Jamie
Dettmer
Jamie
Dettmer is opinion editor and a foreign affairs columnist at POLITICO Europe.
https://www.politico.eu/article/sculpting-europe-in-maga-image-steve-bannon/
Former
White House strategist Steve Bannon is clearly gleeful as we sit down to
discuss the new U.S. National Security Strategy and the hostility it displays
toward America’s supposed allies in Europe.
With its
brutal claim that Europe is headed for “civilizational erasure,” the document
prompted gasps of horror from European capitals when it was released this
month. But the MAGA firebrand — and current host of the influential “War Room”
podcast — only has words of praise.
“It is a
shot across the bow of the EU, and even NATO,” he purred, seemingly astonished
that the 33-page document ever saw the light of day in its published form
without being muted by the more fainthearted Trump aides. Famously, Bannon had
once claimed he wanted “to drive a stake through the Brussels vampire.” And
now, he and other MAGA influencers get to sharpen their stake with the
encouragement of U.S. government policy.
Above
all, it’s what Bannon describes as the commitment to “back resistance movements
to the globalists” that thrills him most. “It was pleasantly shocking that it
was so explicit,” he said of the document’s prioritization of support for
so-called “patriotic European parties,” with the aim of halting the continent’s
supposed slide into irreversible decline due to mass migration, falling birth
rates and the dilution of national cultural identities.
But while
Bannon extols Trump’s foreign-policy priorities, former U.S. diplomats fret the
administration may be signaling an intention to go beyond expressing its
rhetorical support for MAGA’s ideological allies and browbeating their
opponents. Could Washington be tempted to launch more clandestine activities?
And if the continent’s current trajectory does, indeed, represent a threat to
U.S. national security interests by weakening transatlantic allies — as the
document claims — would that justify straying into the unsettling territory of
covert action?
In short,
could we see a reprise of Cold War tactics of political subversion? A time that
saw the CIA competing with the KGB, meddling in elections in Italy and Greece,
secretly funding academic journals, magazines and think tanks across Western
Europe, and disseminating black propaganda to shape public opinion and counter
Soviet propaganda.
“[The
NSS] could just be seen as a guiding document for people who are trying, in an
overt way, on behalf of the Trump administration, to exert influence over the
direction of European politics,” said Jeff Rathke, head of the American-German
Institute at Johns Hopkins University.
But the
former U.S. diplomat worries it could also entail more: “It remains unclear the
degree to which other parts of the U.S. national security and foreign policy
establishment might also see it as a nudge to do things that go beyond simple
overt expressions of endorsement and support,” he said. “That, I think, is an
interesting dimension that hasn’t really been explored in the media reporting
so far.”
According
to Rathke, who previously served in the U.S. embassies in Dublin, Moscow and
Riga, and was the deputy director of the State Department’s Office of European
Security and Political Affairs, “different agencies of the U.S. government” are
now probably trying to figure out how the NSS should shape their own
activities.
NSS
documents are generally aspirational, explained former U.S. diplomat and CIA
officer Ned Price. “They set out the broad parameters of what an administration
hopes to achieve and act as a helpful guide. When you’re talking about
something like covert action, the NSS isn’t in itself a green light to do
something. That would take a presidential finding and a lot of back-and-forth
between the president and the CIA director,” he told POLITICO.
But while
Price finds it unlikely the administration would resort to covert action, he
doesn’t categorically rule it out either. “Maybe in extremes, it could go back
to Cold War-era CIA activities,” he mused. “That said, there’s been a lot of
rule-bending. There are a lot of norms being broken. I don’t want to be too
precious and say this administration couldn’t do such a thing — but it would be
highly risky.”
Bannon,
for his part, pooh-poohs the idea that the administration would organize
clandestine operations against European liberals and centrists. “Even if Trump
ordered it, there would be zero chance his instructions would be executed —
particularly by the intelligence agencies,” he scoffed. As far as he sees it,
they’re all “deep state” enemies of MAGA.
Plus, why
would you need covert action when you have the MAGA movement and deep-pocketed
tech billionaires like Elon Musk promoting far-right European figures and
parties?
However,
Washington’s muscular efforts to bully the EU into curtailing its landmark
Digital Services Act (DSA) with visa bans and threats of punitive tariffs
could, for example, read as overt covert action.
Trump
aides like Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers say they
oppose the DSA, which aims to block harmful speech and disinformation, because
it amounts to foreign influence over online speech, stifles the free speech of
Americans, and imposes costs on U.S. tech companies. But European MAGA allies
have lobbied Washington hard to help them push back against the legislation,
which, they say, is largely aimed at silencing them. The Department of State
declined a POLITICO interview request with Rogers, referring us to the White
House.
The NSS
will now likely turbocharge these transatlantic activities, and we’ll no doubt
see the administration give even more love and attention to their “ideological
allies in Europe,” said Price. “Instead of hosting the German chancellor, maybe
we’ll see the hosting of the AfD head in the Oval Office.”
For
Europe’s ultraconservatives and populists, the document serves as an invitation
to double their efforts to gain MAGA blessings as they try to reforge their
politics in Trump’s image, hoping that what’s worked for him in America will
work for them in Europe. “I think, in the past it was a big mistake that
conservative forces were just focused on their own countries,” explained Markus
Frohnmaier, an Alternative for Germany (AfD) lawmaker who sits on the
Bundestag’s foreign affairs committee.
Frohnmaier
is among the AfD politicians flocking to the U.S. to meet with Trump officials
and attend MAGA events. Earlier this month, he was the guest of honor at a gala
hosted by New York’s Young Republicans Club, where he was awarded a prize in
memory of founding CIA director Allen Dulles, who had overseen the agency’s
massive operation to manipulate Italy’s 1948 election and ensure a
Soviet-backed Popular Front didn’t win.
“What
we’re trying to do is something new, with conservatives starting to interact
and network seriously to try to help each other with tactics and messaging and
to spotlight the issues important for us,” he told POLITICO.
Among the
key issues for Frohnmaier is Germany’s firewall (brandmauer), which excludes
the AfD from participating in coalition governments at the federal and state
levels. He and other AfD politicians have discussed this with MAGA figures and
Trump officials, urging them to spotlight it as “undemocratic” and help them
smash it.
But
Bannon hopes it isn’t just the firewall that cracks — and he’s clearly
relishing upcoming opportunities to amplify the radical populist message across
Europe. “I think MAGA will be much more aggressive in Europe because President
Trump has given a green light with the national security memo, which is very
powerful,” he said. And he’s brimming with iconoclastic schemes to smash the
bloc’s liberal hegemony and augment the Trump administration’s efforts.
Interestingly,
first up is Ireland.
“I’m
spending a ton of time behind the scenes on the Irish situation to help form an
Irish national party,” Bannon told POLITICO.
At first
glance, Ireland wouldn’t seem the most promising territory for MAGA. Last year,
none of the far-right candidates came anywhere near winning a seat in the Dáil,
and this year, professional mixed martial arts fighter and MAGA favorite Conor
McGregor had to drop out of Ireland’s presidential race, despite endorsements
from both Trump and Musk.
None of
that’s deterring Bannon, though. “They’re going to have an Irish MAGA, and
we’re going to have an Irish Trump. That’s all going to come together, no
doubt. That country is right on the edge thanks to mass migration,” he said
definitively.
Of
course, Britain, France and Germany figure prominently in future MAGA plans
too: “MAGA thinks the European governments, by and large, are deadbeats. They
love AfD. They love what National Rally is doing. They love Nigel Farage,” he
said.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário