European
leaders have been stunned at the speed with which the Trump
administration appears to be targeting them -- and some fear an
emboldened Kremlin.
Vice President JD Vance and other top administration officials made their European debut last week, slashing their way through a continent of allies
as they embraced far-right leaders, demanded access to mineral wealth
and offered sympathy to the views of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
By the end of the week, European leaders found themselves potentially cut out of peace talks with Russia, facing down a trade war
with Washington and scrambling to answer U.S. requests about how many
troops they can marshal to Ukraine to guarantee a truce negotiated
without their input.
Europeans
already had four years of a Trump presidency. But many policymakers say
that this time feels different, with four head-snapping weeks of Trump
already recasting the attitudes of leaders who had vowed to make the
best of his new term in office.
“The
view was a little bit more optimistic” just four weeks ago as Trump
entered office, Finnish President Alexander Stubb told reporters
Saturday.
“Of
course, the developments that we’ve seen in the past few days give us a
little bit more pause for pessimism. But as I’ve always said, pessimism
is usually inaction. Optimism is action, and realism is a solution,” he
continued. “So let’s be realistic and try to look at a good pathway
forward.”
Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks at a news conference after a meeting at
NATO headquarters on Feb. 13 in Brussels. (Omar Havana/Getty Images)
Many
Europeans are looking at the situation “with nervousness, frustration
and even alarm,” said Jeffrey Rathke, the president of the
American-German Institute at Johns Hopkins University and a former U.S.
diplomat.
European
foreign ministers who were in Munich this weekend for an annual
gathering of the transatlantic security elite sat for an impromptu
breakfast on Sunday to discuss what to do. French President Emmanuel
Macron invited some of Europe’s leaders to Paris on Monday to discuss
European security and Ukraine.
Advocates
of Washington’s generations-long partnership with European democracies
say that Trump’s team has quickly become a force for chaos. The United
States helped rebuild Europe after World War II and fostered the
economic cooperation of the European Union to try to put an end to
nationalist clashes on the continent.Critics say Trump is trying to pull
Europe apart, emboldening the Kremlin and raising the risk of borders
being redrawn again by force.
“We
had a century of American leadership where we’ve been able to be seen
as a force toward stability. And that is not just vanishing, but it’s
actually moving in the opposite direction,” said Sen. Andy Kim (D-New
Jersey), who worked for the State Department before going into politics
and spent the weekend talking to European policymakers in Munich.
“We
are becoming a source of instability and a source of concern, even
among our own allies,” he said. “What’s the value of the American
handshake? And right now here in Munich, it doesn’t have value. People
don’t think they can count on it, even if they get an agreement.”
‘Whiplash’
Europeans
have been shocked by the speed with which Trump and his lieutenants
have taken aim at pillars of their continent’s security and moved to cut
a deal with Russia. Many NATO allies left a meeting of defense ministers last week
convinced that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth planned to pull tens of
thousands of troops from Europe in the coming years, three officials
said, though they cautioned the effort still appears nascent.
Trump
also spoke for nearly 90 minutes on Wednesday to Putin without
consulting with Ukraine or Europeans beforehand, then emerged from the
conversation appearing to embrace the Kremlin’s viewpoint that NATO expansion justified Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Until now, it has been a tenet of U.S. policy that European countries
have the right to seek their own alliances free from Russian military
pushback.
Some
on Trump’s team dismiss the idea that he is trying to sow divisions
inside Europe. Tough, frank talk between friends is the best way to
spark European defense spending and rebuild a partnership, they say.
“You
look at triage as a medic, what’s the first thing you do? Stop the
bleeding, then you treat for shock. And what we’re trying to do is we’re
trying to stop the bleeding,” said Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy
for Ukraine and Russia.
“You
cannot restrict this conflict intellectually to just Europe,” he said.
“This is a global fight. And if you don’t think it’s a global fight,
you’re wrong.”
Keith
Kellogg, U.S. special envoy for Russia and Ukraine, looks on during a
bilateral meeting between Vice President JD Vance and NATO Secretary
General Mark Rutte at the Commerzbank in Munich on Feb. 14. (Leah
Millis/Reuters)
But
Europeans say that Trump’s policies are unraveling efforts to cooperate
against common foes. Even good-faith attempts to build ties to his
administration have been undercut by his shifting decisions, some of
them said, noting that they were told to talk to Kellogg about Ukraine
and Russia when he was appointed the envoy and have invested months in
the relationship.
Trump
last week appeared to cut Kellogg out of the key dialogue with Russia,
announcing that his Mideast envoy and personal friend, Steve Witkoff,
would handle talks with the Kremlin instead. Kellogg won’t be in Riyadh
this week when the Trump administration sits down with Russian
counterparts for the highest-level dialogue since the February 2022
invasion of Ukraine.
“We
need to work together against dictators and not fight among each other
about democracy,” Dutch Defense Minister Ruben Brekelmans said in an
interview. “And we should project unity and strength.”
One
former U.S. official in Munich summed up attitudes succinctly:
“Whiplash,” the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear
of retaliation.
‘The old days are over’
Many
policymakers were especially taken aback by Vance’s Friday speech in
Munich, where he blasted “fire walls” that Germany’s centrist parties
have built against including the anti-immigrant, nationalist Alternative
for Germany party in coalitions. Some of the party’s leaders have
embraced Nazi-era slogans and declared that new generations should be
freed from apologizing for the sins of their grandparents. Vance also
met party leader Alice Weidel, becoming the highest-ranking U.S.
official to do so.
Vance
was trying “to pick a fight with us, and we don’t want to a pick a
fight with our friends,” European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas
said Friday after the speech.
Some
leaders noted that Vance delivered the speech a day after laying a
wreath for the victims of the Dachau concentration camp — a physical
embodiment of what can happen when nationalism steers toward extremes.
The
threat is not just theoretical, they said: Russia has designs on full
control of Ukraine and potentially biting into other neighbors too.
“I’m
not saying that we are at war, but we cannot claim that we are in
peacetime anymore, and a hybrid car is still a car, right? Hybrid war,”
said Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who has already clashed
with Trump over his demands to take over Greenland.
“For
me, I mean, there is a big risk that something that will look nice on
the paper will give Russia the possibility to mobilize, to rearm and to
continue, maybe in Ukraine or somewhere else,” she said.
Police
and emergency responders attend the site where a Russian missile landed
near Lukianivskyi station in Shevchenkivskyi district on Jan. 8 in
central Kyiv, Ukraine. (Ed Ram/For The Washington Post)
Ukraine’s
leader also noted the new attitude from Trump, pushing Europe to unite
in the face of the challenge and build the strongest possible
relationship with Washington.
“A
few days ago, President Trump told me about his conversation with
Putin. Not once did he mention that America needs Europe at the table,”
President Volodymyr Zelensky said Saturday. “That says a lot. The old
days are over when America supported Europe just because it always had.”
Elements
of the common U.S. and European effort to help Ukraine have fallen
victim to Trump’s targeting of the United States Agency for
International Development and freeze on foreign aid. Key parts of the
challenging work to keep Ukraine’s lights on were paid by USAID,
freezing the production of key replacement parts for the power grid and
generation, one Ukrainian energy official said, speaking on the
condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive security topic.
With
no clarity about when or if U.S. funding might be restored, Ukrainians
likely will shiver in the dark next winter for more hours every day than
if USAID were paying the contracts it signed, the official said.
“If
there’s not any kind of underlying trust and alliance, and everything
is [a] jump ball because it’s a negotiating tactic,” said Sen. Mark R.
Warner (D-Va.), “will people then rightfully feel everything with
America is now transactional, rather than based upon the normal rule of
shared values and shared history, shared defense against authoritarians
in the past?”
Ellen Francis contributed to this report.