Recent tensions, driven by shifting U.S. foreign policy and trade threats, have led some analysts and officials to characterize the relationship between Western European leaders and the current U.S. administration as increasingly adversarial.
While traditional, deep-seated alliances remain, disagreements over trade, defense spending, and the Russia-Ukraine conflict have strained ties.
Trade and Economic Conflict: European leaders have criticized U.S. tariff threats as "commercial blackmail," with some suggesting the EU should suspend existing trade deals in response.
Shifting Alliances: Some European leaders are moving toward greater independence from the U.S. security umbrella, partly due to concerns over reliability.
Political Ideology: The rise of populist, right-wing, and anti-immigrant politics in both the U.S. and some European nations has created a complex, often polarized, relationship. This how they use diplomatic language to characterize it.
Public Perception: A 2025 survey indicated that a significant portion of Europeans view the Trump administration as a threat to their interests. Their leaders are pushing these ideas on them. This is a propaganda war too.
"Cultivating Resistance": The 2025 National Security Strategy indicates a shift in focus toward "cultivating resistance to Europe's current trajectory," with reports suggesting an ideological conflict between the U.S. administration and the European model of democracy.
Allied Reaction: European leaders are increasingly, though sometimes privately, viewing the U.S. as a disruptive force, leading to calls for increased European strategic autonomy in defense.
"Hard Leverage": The approach is viewed by some in Washington as a necessary form of "hard leverage" to force European nations to align more with U.S. priorities, such as increased defense spending and border control.
“PARIS -- President Trump's diplomats increasingly are willing to chastise Europeans in public. The response from authorities here has been sharp: Mind your own business.
In recent weeks, Trump administration envoys have waded into some of Europe's most sensitive political debates, demanding action to counter far-left violence, migration and antisemitism.
In the latest flare-up, the X account of the U.S. Ambassador to France, Charles Kushner, posted that the killing of a far-right activist this month in Lyon showed how the far-left was a threat to public order. French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot summoned Kushner to a meeting in protest.
In a breach of diplomatic protocol, Kushner didn't show up.
"We do not accept that foreign countries and foreign authorities should invite themselves into our national political debate," Barrot said.
Trump's envoys have cast aside decades of tradition that call for diplomats to avoid meddling -- at least publicly -- in the politics of their host country.
As the guarantors of European security, U.S. officials have long prodded European politicians on various issues -- but usually behind closed doors and rarely with the bluntness of Trump's diplomats.
The criticism has added an irritant to a trans-Atlantic relationship that is on its shakiest ground since World War II. Coming after Trump's demands for Greenland and his tariffs on Europe, the diplomats' combativeness has contributed to the sense that the U.S. is no longer an ally.
The State Department said it is Trump's right to have ambassadors who advance his America First agenda.
On Wednesday, the U.S. drew criticism from U.K. lawmakers over a visit by far-right activist Tommy Robinson to the State Department. Robinson has organized large rallies in the U.K. opposing migration. He met with Joe Rittenhouse, a senior adviser for the department's Consular Affairs bureau, who called Robinson a "free speech warrior" in a post on X about the meeting.
U.K. Labour lawmaker Phil Brickell told Politico that the visit was an outrage given that Robinson has "peddled racist tropes." The State Department said Robinson visited the department in an unofficial capacity. Robinson didn't respond to a request for comment.
U.S. diplomats often are echoing the views of Europe expressed by senior administration figures such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice President JD Vance and Trump himself, who say the continent is being dragged down by mass migration, "woke" ideology and excessive regulation.
The U.S. shift has been jarring, coming from Europe's closest historic ally. Earlier this month, the U.S. ambassador to Belgium, Bill White, accused the government of antisemitism for investigating mohels, specialists in ritual Jewish circumcision, who potentially lacked medical training required by the state.
"MUST DROP THE RIDICULOUS AND ANTI-SEMITIC 'PROSECUTION' NOW OF THE 3 JEWISH RELIGIOUS FIGURES (MOHELS) IN ANTWERP!" White wrote on X.
"Any suggestion that Belgium is antisemitic is false, offensive, and unacceptable," Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot said on X.
After the dust-up between Kushner and the French foreign ministry, Barrot said he would no longer be allowed to meet with French government officials -- until he comes to a meeting at the ministry.
"You should respect the most basic customs of diplomacy," Barrot said Tuesday.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Paris said that later on Tuesday Kushner and Barrot had a "frank and amicable call, reaffirming their shared commitment to working together, along with all other ministers and French officials."” [1]
1. World News: U.S. Envoys Ruffle Feathers By Interfering in Europe --- Diplomats step into sensitive political debates, drawing the ire of leaders. Dalton, Matthew; Bisserbe, Noemie; Gramer, Robbie. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 27 Feb 2026: A9.
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