Just a few hours before appearing at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Donald Trump chose an approach that leaves no room for misinterpretation. Cold tone. Public irony. Targeted insults. Not toward adversaries, but toward allies. Europe is not treated as an equal partner, but as a field for exerting pressure — at any moment and without the slightest sanction or countermeasure.
The first striking element is what he did not say. In his message marking one year of governance, foreign policy was almost absent. No extensive reference to Ukraine. No strategic declaration about NATO. No attempt to “bind” alliances. This is not negligence. It is a choice.
Trump invests in the image of a president who does not explain — he imposes. Foreign policy, by his standards, is not announced in anniversary messages. It is exercised piecemeal, through power moves, economic threats, and public humiliation. Silence in the message amounts to a warning: decisions will not go through consultation.
Greenland as a Test of Discipline
Greenland is not a geopolitical whim. It is a tool. Trump knows the issue touches the borders of the absurd for European public opinion. That is precisely why he chose it. He is not interested in immediate implementation. He is interested in the reaction.
Europe found itself seriously discussing something that would normally be dismissed at a glance. That alone constitutes success for the White House. Greenland functions as a test of reflexes. How quickly Brussels reacts. How united it is. And, above all, how decisively.
So far, the picture is not encouraging. Statements of concern. Summits without a clear line. And a diffuse anxiety that Trump might shift the pressure elsewhere — to NATO, to Ukraine, to trade.
Why the Allies Are in the Crosshairs
Trump does not need to pressure adversaries. He considers them a given. Russia, China, Iran operate on a different level of balance. With Europe, however, there is an asymmetry of dependence. And that is his real power.
European leaders depend on the American security umbrella. On access to the U.S. market. On political backing on critical fronts. Trump knows he can apply pressure without immediate cost. And he does so publicly, to maximize the effect.
The irony toward Emmanuel Macron, the hints aimed at Keir Starmer, the flattering messages he reposts from Mark Rutte are not contradictions. They are part of the same pattern. He differentiates, ranks, rewards, and exposes.
Davos as a Stage, Not a Forum
In Davos, Trump is not going to persuade. He is going to measure. To see who withstands the pressure. Who rushes to make contacts. Who offers concessions before they are even requested.
Europe, so far, is playing defense. It speaks of “strategic autonomy,” but moves in fear. It hopes the tension will dissipate. That Trump will turn elsewhere. This, however, is a misreading. As long as there is no reaction, the pressure will increase.
Trump is not preparing a rupture — not immediately, at least — with Europe. He is preparing a rearrangement. He wants a continent more disciplined, more dependent, less ambitious. The limited reference to foreign policy does not mean retreat. It means decisions will come without warning; for Trump, after all, helicopters, gunfire, and Delta Force teams may not be required to seize an important target overnight — for example, Venezuela.
For Europe, the question is not whether it will disagree. It is whether it can endure the confrontation it has so far avoided.
To date, 365 days after the return to the Oval Office, there has not been a single tangible sign of resistance from the eastern side of the Atlantic to anything — however extreme, vain, or even insulting — that has been articulated by the United States. That alone is the greatest proof not only that Europe is ailing, and severely so, but above all the answer to why Trump persists almost obsessively — or as a hobby — in striking this decades-long allied flank rather than Beijing, Moscow, or Tehran.
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