Europe | Charlemagne

Europe cannot fathom what Trumpian America wants from it

From tariffs to Ukraine, Europeans are stuck in the Fog of Peace

Illustration of hikers walking up a hill but being frightened off by an angry monster that is shaped like the G in the acronym MAGA.
Illustration: Peter Schrank
|5 min read

Carl von Clausewitz, a 19th-century Prussian general, described warfare as “the realm of uncertainty”. The fellow never had to deal with an American administration run by Donald Trump. Forget the fog of war Clausewitz posited; Europe is discovering the perils of wading through the haze of Pax Americana, MAGA edition. Wish it luck. Being the biggest trading partner of a country that seeks “liberation” through tariffs, or a decades-long military ally of a superpower now parroting Kremlin talking points, is akin to inching through a geopolitical pea-souper. Europe is hardly alone in being flummoxed by Mr Trump (many Americans are, too). But it faces a unique problem: Europe cannot fathom what it should do to fix its already broken relationship with the new administration. Even if Europeans wanted to help their historical partner—a big “if” these days—disagreements abound as to what that partner wants.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The Fog of Peace”

From the April 5th 2025 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and Head of the Presidential Office Andriy Yermak in Kyiv, Ukraine

Ukraine’s political infighting gets nasty

As Trump starves it of arms, there is turmoil inside the government

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Turkey’s strongman is becoming Donald Trump’s point man

But renewed war with Iran would put the honeymoon with Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the test


Historical pic of Bundestag FC football team

Germany’s Bundestag bars AfD MPs from its football team

Could the sporting ban precede a political one?


An infestation of ticks menaces Istanbul

And mosquitos are a growing problem too

The sleeping policeman at the heart of Europe

Enforcement of EU law has become an afterthought

A pragmatic amnesty for separatists benefits Catalonia

But it carries costs for the rule of law