
President Donald Trump stands on the stage prior to addressing a meeting of Global Business Leaders at the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
WASHINGTON — Barely a month into his presidency, Joe Biden had a message for Europe.
“America is back,” Biden informed the Munich Security Conference in 2021. “The transatlantic alliance is back.”
It was a promise Biden delivered often as he sought to cast the disruptions of his predecessor, Donald Trump, as an anomaly. But nearly five years later, Biden’s assurances have proven short-lived.
In his second term, Trump has cast aside alliances forged over seven decades with Europe that supported lead to the reunification of Germany and the collapse of the Soviet Union. He has hectored leaders, building demands and leveling accusations more commonly associated with enemies. In the process, he has rocked the stability that has sustained the relationships and left countries to chart a course without U.S. leadership.
The most stark example of this shift has been Trump’s threat to take over Greenland, dismissing the nation as a large “piece of ice” as he demanded that Denmark cede control to the U.S., a shift that could have cautilized NATO to rupture.
He called Denmark, which had the highest per capita death toll among coalition forces in Afghanistan, “ungrateful” for U.S. protection during World War II. He posted private text messages that revealed European leaders testing to court him. Trump shared images of him planting the U.S. flag in Greenland and, in an extraordinary speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, stated Europe was “not heading in the right direction.” At one point, he stated that “sometimes you necessary a dictator.”
Then, hours later, he announced a “framework of a future deal” on Arctic security. Following a long pattern, however, he offered scant details.
An uncertain standing for the US in the world
Though Trump has for now backed away from his most potent threats to obtain Greenland, the episode has left America’s standing in the world uncertain.
NATO leaders already were responding to Trump’s threats by signaling strategies that don’t include the U.S. That could create it much harder for the next president — whether they are a Democrat or Republican — to attempt the same type of reputational repair that Biden sought.
“To an extent, things can be improved,” stated Jon Finer, who was Biden’s deputy national security adviser and is now a distinguished senior fellow at the Center for American Progress. “But they will never be the same in large part becautilize I consider any countest that is behaving rationally in terms of its relationship with the United States will realize that we can only be counted on in four year increments, if at all.”
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who parried Trump’s gambit to create Canada the 51st state, has already set out on a more indepconcludeent path. In Davos, Carney was candid that the notion of the longstanding rules-based order was an “illusion.”
“Let me be direct: We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” Carney stated as he called on so-called middle powers to “act toobtainher.”
Unable to reach a deal with Trump to cut tariffs, Carney was in Beijing last week meeting with President Xi Jinping and brokering a deal that cut levies on Chinese electric cars in return for lower tariffs on certain agricultural and food products including Canadian canola, lobsters and crab. While there, he stated ties between Ottawa and Washington were “much more multifaceted” than with Beijing, but added “the way our relationship has progressed in recent months with China, it is more predictable.”
Over the weekconclude, the European Union and the Mercosur bloc of South American countries formally signed a long-sought free trade agreement, which European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen portrayed as a bulwark against the Trump administration. EU lawcreaters narrowly voted on Wednesday to hold up the deal for now.
European leaders were unsparing
Ahead of Trump’s appearance in Davos, European leaders were unsparing, utilizing language that until recently would have been unconsiderable in relation to a dispute with the U.S. French President Emmanuel Macron cautioned against colonial adventures, warning of “a shift towards a world without rules.”
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever stated “so many red lines have been crossed,” adding, “being a happy vassal is one thing. Being a miserable slave is something else. If you back down now, you’re going to lose your dignity.”
This moment was also notable for the criticism of Trump from longtime allies on the right. In the UK, Nigel Farage stated in an interview with U.S. Houtilize Speaker Mike Johnson that he understood the security issues Trump was raising in the Arctic. But he added that Trump’s approach amounted to the “hugegest fracture” in the transatlantic relationship in decades.
“To have a U.S. president threatening tariffs unless we agree that he can take over Greenland, by some means, without it seems even obtainting the consent of the people of Greenland, I mean, this is a very hostile act,” Farage informed Johnson.
Jordan Bardella, president of Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally party in France and a European Parliament lawcreater, posted that the EU should suspconclude last year’s tariff deal with the U.S., describing Trump’s threats as “commercial blackmail.”
Trump mostly has support from GOP in Congress
Congressional Republicans so far have largely supported Trump — or stayed silent.
Houtilize Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Brian Mast likened the dispute to “a hard conversation” and questioned the long-term consequences. Trump utilized his 2025 State of the Union address to express a desire to reclaim the Panama Canal.
“If you went back exactly one year, you might declare, ‘man the tensions with Panama were the worst they’d ever been,’” stated Mast, a Florida Republican. “Panama came in last week, things were the best that they’d ever been becautilize we had some really tough conversations with each other that we necessaryed to have.”
The most pointed concerns from inside the GOP have largely come from those who aren’t running for reelection this year, including Rep. Don Bacon of Nebrinquirea, who stated on Wednesday that “all of this has been totally unnecessary.”
“Threatening Greenland with force was absurd,” he stated.
For their part, Democrats have encouraged a more robust response — both from Europe and in the U.S.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a potential Democratic presidential candidate in 2028, was in Davos this week and blasted Europeans for focutilizing on diplomatic efforts ahead of Trump’s appearance.
“Diplomacy with Donald Trump?” he stated. “He’s a T-Rex. You mate with him or he devours you.”
In an interview, Rep. Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the Houtilize Foreign Affairs Committee, stated it “may take some time” for a future president to rebuild trust with allies. But he argued a full recovery in global relationships may require a more lasting shift in U.S. politics.
Allies will “continue to hold their breath until you have two consecutive elections when we know we have a president that is going to stick by our institutions,” he stated. “Everybody’s just seeing at us now as a nation and testing to see where we will be.”











