Donald Trump is becoming the greatest unifier of Europe since the end of the cold war
Donald Trump is becoming the greatest unifier of Europe since the end of the cold war
Fabrizio Tassinari
The US president may be helping Putin to destroy the west, but his vanity is causing Europeans to speak with one voice on Ukraine
Wed 20 Aug 2025 00.00 EDT
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Its difficult to say at this stage whether anything good will come from the impromptu White House summit, but European leaders showing up as a group in support of Ukraine was a first.
This seven-member format Nato, the European Commission, France, Germany, the UK, Italy and Finland truly spoke with one voice. They did so on a crisis, Ukraine, over which they have sometimes been bitterly divided throughout the past three and a half years (remember Emmanuel Macrons early concern not to humiliate Vladimir Putin?). Yet Ukraine is also the dossier over which European leaders have converged and yielded the greatest impact during the same timeframe: from the 18 sanctions packages the EU has imposed on Russia and the opening of EU accession negotiations for Ukraine, to the supply of weapons to Kyiv.
In Washington, we saw a rare and unprecedented yet admirably balanced European ensemble: countries from northern and southern Europe, large and small, two nuclear powers and permanent members of the UN security council, the two institutions headquartered in Brussels but often appearing to inhabit two different planets; and the UK, perfectly in tune with European positions, despite having withdrawn from its core political entity.
For those like myself who have followed the chimera that is European foreign and security policy for years,
it was almost an epiphany to witness these seven leaders, each speaking for two minutes, repeating the exact same message. To be sure, they had nuances as varied as their English-language accents. Macron and his German counterpart, Friedrich Merz, insisted on a ceasefire, while Italys Giorgia Meloni claimed ownership of the proposal for possible military protection of Ukraine modelled on Natos article 5. Yet
everyone agreed on the need for iron-clad security guarantees for Kyiv, keeping the transatlantic front united and the imperative of a just and lasting peace.
As always, it took a crisis to jolt Europeans out of their inertia. The immediate one began last Friday with the shameful summit in Alaska between Trump and Putin. Trump alarmingly reneged on threats and ultimatums to Russia and instead rolled out the red carpet for the Russian dictator, for reasons we may never fully understand. It continued over the weekend with the real risk that Zelenskyy could once again be the victim of an Oval Office ambush.
Paradoxically, we must thank Trumps vanity, disloyalty, his disdain for liberal and democratic ideals, his cynicism, for giving Europeans the urgent signal they needed to dash to the table in Washington. Trump may be destroying what remains of the west; but together with Putin he is unwittingly proving himself to be Europes other, that is, the external force that is shaping its collective identity, and thus the greatest unifier of Europe since the end of the cold war.
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/aug/20/donald-trump-great-unifier-europe-cold-war