Will
Europe’s populists dump Trump? Blind support is a vote loser
Will
Europe’s populists dump Trump?
‘The
optics of self-described European patriots saying little while their
transatlantic ally economically waterboards the continent are not good.’
Thomas
Fazi
13 Mar
2026 - 12:01am 7 mins
https://unherd.com/2026/03/will-european-populists-dump-trump/
On the
face of it, Donald Trump looks like a natural ally for Europe’s sovereigntists
and national-populists — and most of them eagerly embraced him as one when he
returned to the White House in 2025. A few went so far as to even adapt his
branding, advocating to Make Europe Great Again (MEGA). But that embrace may
now be unravelling. Trump’s aggressive tariff campaign against Europe, his
annexationist rhetoric over Greenland, and above all the ongoing war against
Iran and its attendant energy disruptions are making even some of his closest
European populist allies jittery. For the European Right, a painful reckoning
with the reality of American power may soon become unavoidable.
The real
question, however, is how they failed to see this coming. The uncritical
acceptance of Trump by Europe’s populist Right reveals a poor understanding of
US foreign policy, and a near-total absence of geopolitical vision. Regardless
of who sits in the White House, the logic behind America’s foreign policy
remains the same: advancing US economic and geopolitical interests at the
expense of everyone else.
Since the
early Nineties, every single American president has ended up bombing some
faraway country, despite all of them — including George W. Bush! — campaigning
against foreign entanglements. Trump 2.0 is merely the latest, and most brazen,
iteration of this pattern. Having vowed to “stop all wars” as recently as in
his inauguration speech, he has since pursued the most aggressive and
militarist foreign policy since Bush Jr., culminating in the attack on Iran —
something none of his predecessors had dared to do, despite four decades of
Israeli pressure to that end, precisely because they understood the
catastrophic consequences. For Europe’s self-described patriots, America’s
addiction to military intervention — much of it, over the past quarter century,
on or near Europe’s doorstep — should have prompted some caution. That would
have been far safer than automatically aligning with “America First” or taking
Trump’s promise of peace at face value.
This
imperial logic applies to its allies just as much as to its adversaries. Since
the Second World War, Washington has consistently treated Europe as a key
extension of its global empire, a region to be controlled politically,
economically and militarily, and kept firmly aligned with US interests. Nato
has been central to this project. As summarised by its first Secretary General,
Lord Ismay, its function was that of “keeping the Russians out, the Americans
in and the Germans down”. In other words, the original purpose of the Alliance
was not to defend Europe, but to prevent the emergence of an autonomous bloc,
ensure its strategic subordination to the United States and foreclose
rapprochement with Russia.
Earlier
European sovereigntists understood this. Charles de Gaulle deeply resented what
he saw as American domination of Western Europe under the guise of the Atlantic
alliance, arguing that it reduced European nations to the status of
protectorates rather than genuine sovereign states. In 1966 he acted on this
conviction, withdrawing France from Nato’s military structure and expelling US
forces from French soil.
In the
six decades since, US policy towards Europe has remained essentially unchanged.
In the Eighties, when European nations, led by France and West Germany, sought
to pursue a détente with the Soviet Union, Washington pushed back, insisting
that European security policy be subordinated to American Cold War strategy.
And even after the fall of the Soviet Union, the US made clear that that
European security would remain anchored to American leadership through Nato.
Far from
providing security to the continent, the Alliance’s eastward expansion was a
key factor in triggering the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which the US then
exploited not only to “bleed” Russia — but also to drive a wedge between Europe
and Russia, and force the EU to decouple from Russian gas and turn to American
gas instead, both of which were longstanding US strategic imperatives. This was
made possible by a European political class in submission to the transatlantic
dogma. Just look at their silence in the face of the Nord Stream bombing, an
act of sabotage carried out with at least US foreknowledge, if not direct US
involvement.
European
populists have long attributed this subservience to ideology — an unholy
alliance between liberal-globalists on both sides of the Atlantic. But Trump
himself explodes this thesis. Despite being as ideologically remote from
Europe’s liberal-transatlanticist class as it is possible to imagine, he has
extracted from them essentially the same compliance: on trade, defence, Nato
spending and even Greenland. The master-servant relationship, it turns out, has
nothing to do with ideology; it is structural. One might expect this from a
“globalist” political establishment quite clearly beholden to foreign and
vested interests. Yet the same transatlantic streak seems to run through
virtually all European Right-populist parties, which means the continent’s sovereigntists
are either comfortable with Europe’s subordination to Washington or genuinely
blind to its structural nature, believing that Trump would somehow be
different.
“The
master-servant relationship, it turns out, has nothing to do with ideology; it
is structural.”
In fact,
things have only got worse. Since returning to the White House, Trump has
launched an aggressive trade war against Europe, threatened to annex part of
its territory, weaponised the continent’s dependence on American gas to extract
political concessions and demanded Europeans spend hundreds of billions on US
weapons. Europe’s globalist establishment has dutifully complied with all of
it. But Europe’s sovereigntist parties have not put up much of a fight either.
Whatever the short-term political calculations, the optics of self-described
European patriots saying little while their transatlantic ally economically
waterboards the continent are not good.
The war
on Iran may prove to be the turning point. Europe is already feeling the
economic ripples: oil and gas prices have surged dramatically, heaping further
hardship on households and businesses already battered by the switch from
Russian to American energy. Indeed, according to the EU Commission President,
the war has already cost European taxpayers an additional €3 billion in fossil
fuels imports. A prolonged conflict — or even a stabilisation of prices at
current levels — would be economically devastating for the continent. And if
Europe loses access to Qatari LNG, its dependence on American gas will become
absolute.
That
alone would be alarming if it were simply an unintended consequence of war.
What if rising energy prices were, however, factored in from the outset? As the
world’s largest producer of oil and gas, and Europe’s principal energy
supplier, the United States stands to gain substantially from the price surge.
This raises the possible scenario: if the proxy war in Ukraine was designed to
decouple Europe from Russian gas, the Iran war may be aimed at decoupling it
from Mediterranean resources altogether. As noted earlier, US imperial strategy
spans decades and administrations, and the ideological colour of the president
is largely irrelevant to its execution.
Nor does
this account for the war’s other potential consequences: mass refugee flows
towards Europe, as previous US Middle Eastern wars have generated, and growing
pressure on European governments to become more directly involved militarily.
Europe now faces two devastating wars on its doorsteps — one to the east,
stoked by Washington, and one to the south, actively waged by it. The first
pushed Europe into economic and geopolitical vassalage, but the second may be
the shock that finally breaks it, plunging it into economic and social
collapse.
In light
of all this, it’s little wonder that rifts are starting to emerge between MAGA
and the European populist camp, and most visibly in Germany, the country most
economically affected by these wars.
The AfD
is probably the party that has received the most explicit US backing, including
Elon Musk’s notorious declaration that “only the AfD can save Germany”. But the
Trump administration’s increasingly reckless and aggressive foreign policy is
now causing serious strains within the party.
The AfD
has always been broadly split into two camps. One — stronger in western
Germany, associated with party leader Alice Weidel and foreign policy spokesman
Markus Frohnmaier — is pro-MAGA, transatlantic, pro-Israel and neoliberally
oriented. The other — dominant in the east, represented by party co-chairman
Tino Chrupalla and Thuringian leader Björn Höcke — is more openly nationalist
and Eurocentric, more sympathetic to Moscow, hostile to US interventionism, and
critical of Germany’s unconditional support for Israel.
Höcke has
been characteristically blunt. In 2022, he stated: “It was and is US strategy,
as a foreign power on our continent, to drive wedges between peoples and
nations that could actually work very well together.” He argues that Germany
must cease to be a “vassal state” of the United States, and that Washington, as
a non-European power, “should withdraw from Europe”, since “the natural partner
for our way of working and living would be Russia”.
When
Trump bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities last June, the divide became impossible
to paper over. Chrupalla wrote on X: “A fuse has been set on the powder keg of
the Middle East.” More recently he said: “Donald Trump started as a president
of peace. In the end, Donald Trump will end as a president of war.” Meanwhile,
within the other wing, Frohnmaier declared that Israel had “every right” to
ensure that “its existence is not threatened”.
The party
leadership has tried to manage these tensions, largely aligning with Trump on
most issues. But the outbreak of the war in Iran has caused these pressures to
bubble to the fore. In a notable break with other European Right-populist
parties, most of which either endorsed or stayed silent about the US-Israeli
strikes, the AfD issued an official statement, claiming that “the renewed
destabilisation of the Middle East is not in the German interest and must be
brought to an end”. It is a modest step, but a telling one. And as the war
grinds on and its costs for Germany mount, the Eurocentric wing of the party is
likely to grow stronger.
Similar
fault lines will inevitably open in other Right-populist parties across the
continent and beyond — and indeed they already are. A vivid example comes from
the UK, where Nigel Farage’s Reform has found itself tied in knots over the
Iran war. Within the space of days, Farage criticised Starmer for not backing
the US operation more forcefully, while simultaneously attacking the rising
fuel prices that the same war has caused. Meanwhile, Reform’s own ranks were
split: deputy leader Richard Tice called for full UK support for the US
offensive, while the party’s new Treasury spokesperson Robert Jenrick, who
recently defected from the Conservatives, told the BBC: “If you’re asking me
the question, do I think that it is in the interests of the British people… for us to be deploying British airmen
in bombing raids over Iran right now, when our allies have not asked us to do
that, then, no, I don’t think
that’s necessary.”
Labour
wasted no time pointing out these contradictions, accusing Reform of “saying
they would bomb Iran” one week and “backtracking as petrol prices rise” the
next. It illustrates the impossible position in which Trump’s war has placed
his European populist allies: they cannot support it without owning its
economic consequences, and they cannot oppose it without betraying their
transatlantic loyalties. But more crucially, it points to the total lack of
geopolitical vision among most Right-populist parties.
They
better get their act together fast. Any national-populist party that wants to
seriously challenge the European liberal-globalist status quo — and wishes to
retain credibility with its voters — can’t limit itself to anti-immigration,
anti-“woke” and anti-establishment domestic politics. It needs to articulate a
coherent foreign-policy framework in line with Europe’s core economic and
geopolitical interests. As de Gaulle understood 60 years ago, this necessarily
means breaking with Washington and its forever wars.

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