
There is a pattern in Donald Trump’s posture toward Europe that is too consistent to dismiss as improvisation. The troop reductions in Germany, the tariff threats against European industries, the rhetorical jabs at Spain and Italy, even the theatrical suggestion of siding with Argentina over the Falklands. These are not isolated provocations. They form a worldview. And at its core lies something less strategic than it is psychological, a deep discomfort with a Europe that acts as one.
Trump’s politics have always thrived on asymmetry. He prefers bilateral relationships where leverage can be applied directly, where pressure can be personalized, where outcomes can be framed as wins or losses. A fragmented Europe fits neatly into that approach. A united Europe does not. The European Union, for all its bureaucratic inertia and internal disagreements, represents something Trump instinctively resists, a rules-based bloc that negotiates collectively, sets standards, and dilutes the kind of transactional bargaining he favors.
This is why the economic argument, often cited by Trump himself, feels incomplete. Yes, trade imbalances matter. Yes, American administrations across party lines have long criticized aspects of European trade policy. But Trump’s rhetoric goes further. It is not merely about correcting terms; it is about undermining the structure that allows Europe to negotiate as a peer. Tariffs, in this context, are less about steel or cars and more about signalling that the United States will not passively accept a competitor that can match its regulatory and economic weight.
There is also a strategic layer that is harder to ignore. A more cohesive Europe, especially one that deepens its defence coordination, inevitably raises questions about NATO’s future balance. For decades, American power has been amplified by alliances in which Washington sets the tone. A Europe that invests seriously in its own security architecture and speaks with one voice, introduces a subtle shift. It becomes less dependent, less predictable and from a certain perspective, less controllable.
Trump’s instinct, then, is not necessarily fear in the traditional sense. It is resistance to a redistribution of influence. His foreign policy has consistently favoured a hierarchy with the United States at the unquestioned top. A united Europe complicates that hierarchy. It does not replace American leadership, but it demands negotiation rather than deference. For a leader who measures success in dominance rather than balance, that distinction matters.
At the same time, it would be a mistake to romanticize Europe’s position in this dynamic. The European Union has often struggled to articulate its own strategic identity. Internal divisions, over fiscal policy, migration, defence spending, have made it an easy target for external pressure. Trump’s approach exploits those fractures. His criticisms resonate in part because they touch on real inconsistencies within the European project. The challenge for Europe is not merely to respond to American pressure but to resolve its own ambiguities.
What makes this moment particularly striking is how openly the tension is expressed. Previous administrations might have pursued similar objectives, pressuring allies on spending, pushing for better trade terms but they did so within a framework that emphasized partnership. Trump strips away that language. He frames allies as competitors, agreements as zero-sum, and diplomacy as a series of transactions. In doing so, he reveals a belief that alliances are valuable only insofar as they reinforce American primacy.
So the question is not whether the United States needs Europe. It clearly does, economically and strategically. Nor is it whether Europe depends on the United States. That interdependence remains undeniable. The real question is whether the relationship can evolve beyond a model rooted in post-war assumptions. Trump’s answer appears to be no. He does not seek adaptation; he seeks recalibration in America’s favour.
If there is unease in Washington about a united Europe, it is not because such a Europe would destroy the American economy. It is because it would force the United States to share the stage in ways that feel unfamiliar. And for a political philosophy built on winning, sharing has always looked suspiciously like losing.









