NEWS
BREAKING…Just one word tells us how European leaders really feel about Trump…Read the full breakdown and see what this means for Trump future…👇👇
BREAKING…Just one word tells us how European leaders really feel about Trump…Read the full breakdown and see what this means for Trump future…👇👇
Diplomacy is a key requisite for any top job in politics. The ability to walk a diplomatic tightrope, making clear your intentions, without falling out with anyone (especially the leader of the free world) is a most precious skill. And in Donald Trump’s second term, European leaders have had to strain every sinew to walk this line.
They’ve done this in part by developing a certain code for managing the US President, whose judgement they question. The war in Iran has made that diplomatic tightrope almost impossible.
When German defence minister Boris Pistorius was asked last week about the chaos surrounding Trump’s demands over the Strait of Hormuz – where he simultaneously threatened allies as “cowards”, declared he didn’t need them, and then appealed for their help to secure this vital waterway – Pistorius offered a response of studied understatement. “One would wish for more predictability, more clarity and more strategic foresight,” he said. Then came the telling afterthought: “Not only in this case.”
That phrase, “not only in this case”, captures the central challenge facing European leaders in their relationship with Trump. They cannot say what they think. They can barely hint at it. And yet, through carefully chosen language, strategic silence and a growing repertoire of coded signals, the picture is unmistakable: Europe’s leaders have quietly lost confidence in the judgement of the most powerful person on earth.
The vocabulary they have developed is precise and deliberate. “Unpredictable” is the word of choice – clinical, depersonalised, impossible to dispute.
Kaja Kallas, the EU’s foreign policy chief, said the bloc has begun “taking the unpredictability of the United States into account”. Antonio Costa, the European Council president, said the transatlantic relationship has simply “changed.” And the top boss, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said that “some lines have been crossed that cannot be uncrossed”, adding that Europeans had undergone a kind of “shock therapy”. These are striking phrases from Brussels officials, where understatement is usually the rule. None of them mentioned Trump by name. None of them needed to.
This depersonalisation serves two purposes. It avoids direct confrontation with a famously thin-skinned president, and preserves, at least rhetorically, the idea that the transatlantic alliance endures, even as its foundations shift beneath its feet.
Privately, the language is starker. Behind the scenes European diplomats, have described a policymaking environment that is “difficult to read and harder to influence.” One senior official put it plainly: “There is no low-risk scenario with Trump.” Another noted that, “it changes every day: we can never know what works and what doesn’t”. These are not assessments of policy differences. They are assessments of a person.
Beyond Brussels, the language has been more graphic. Last week French President Emmanuel Macron praised Europe’s “predictability” contrasting it with countries that “could hurt you without even informing you”. Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk has warned that the transatlantic relationship needs, “trust and respect among all partners, not domination, and for sure, not coercion.” Belgium’s Bart De Wever described Trump as “a real bully”, a rare instance of plain speaking, adding: “You reach the point where sweet-talking is counterproductive. It only encourages them to go a step further – it’s The Very Hungry Caterpillar.”
Keir Starmer has improved his popularity in the UK by standing up to Trump’s demands to join his war against Iran. Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte, who once famously referred to Trump as “daddy“, faces a difficult trip to Washington after the president’s threat this week to take the US out of the alliance.
What has emerged from Europe is a three-layered response. In public, continuity and cooperation: calibrated language, depersonalised criticism, carefully maintained relations. In private, frank acknowledgement of a crisis of reliability. And in practice, a quiet building of fallback options: more European defence spending, more co-ordination among themselves, more planning for scenarios in which Washington cannot be counted on.