Updated
Updated · Foreign Affairs Magazine · Jul 6
May Poll Shows 25% of Europeans View U.S. as Rival as NATO Trust Frays
Updated
Updated · Foreign Affairs Magazine · Jul 6

May Poll Shows 25% of Europeans View U.S. as Rival as NATO Trust Frays

1 articles · Updated · Foreign Affairs Magazine · Jul 6

Summary

  • A May 2026 poll across 15 European countries found a quarter of Europeans now see the United States as a rival or adversary, underscoring a deepening transatlantic trust crisis.
  • That shift follows Trump administration threats to curb NATO support, condition U.S. dues on allies’ spending, exclude Europe from Ukraine and Iran decisions, and even threaten tariffs over Greenland.
  • The mistrust is emerging even as Europe answers long-standing U.S. demands: almost all NATO members hit the 2% GDP target by 2025, and European allies plus Canada now provide 40% of NATO defense spending.
  • Europe also stepped up for Ukraine as U.S. aid waned, increasing 2025 financial and humanitarian support by nearly 60% and military aid by 67%, for more than $80 billion.
  • The report warns Washington could push Europe toward hedging with China or reviving ties with Moscow unless it rebuilds trust through consultation, coordinated troop changes, and a larger European role in Ukraine and Iran diplomacy.

Insights

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Declining European Trust in the US: Polls Reveal Shift Toward Strategic Autonomy and NATO Reassessment (2022–2026)

Overview

Recent polling shows that European trust in the United States as a reliable ally has declined, especially under Donald Trump’s presidency. US actions on the global stage, such as interventions in Venezuela and Greenland, have led Europeans to see America as a power that prefers to be feared rather than loved. This perception has pushed Europeans to embrace self-reliance and recognize the need to strengthen their own security. As a result, Europe is moving toward greater strategic autonomy, while US actions are seen as benefiting rivals like China and increasing differences among democratic allies.

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