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Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has sent a message to...

Von der Leyen Rushes Back to Coordinate EU Response Strategy

The European Parliament has taken decisive action by suspending the US trade agreement ratification process in response to President Trump’s threat of 10% tariffs conditional on European support for his Greenland acquisition. This move represents the most concrete material response Brussels has demonstrated against what European leaders have termed blackmail.
Trade committee chairman Bernd Lange established firm boundaries for future negotiations, declaring that threats involving Greenland must end before any possibility of compromise exists on the trade deal. The suspended agreement had promised to revolutionize American exports to Europe by establishing zero-percent tariffs on many industrial products.
Despite the trade deal freeze, the EU’s commitment to purchase $750 billion in American energy remains fully intact. According to Lange’s confirmation, this energy arrangement operates independently from the tariff negotiations, allowing Brussels to preserve energy cooperation while taking a principled stand.
The diplomatic breakdown manifested dramatically when European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen altered her travel itinerary following her parliamentary address. Rather than proceeding to Davos for a potential encounter with Trump at the World Economic Forum, she immediately returned to Brussels to orchestrate preparations for an emergency summit.
The Thursday evening gathering, scheduled for 7pm, will examine Brussels’ full toolkit of potential countermeasures. European leaders will discuss imposing €93 billion worth of retaliatory tariffs and potentially activating an anti-coercion instrument never previously deployed. Originally designed to counter Chinese economic pressure, this mechanism could enable the EU to restrict US businesses from accessing European markets. Potential targets span technology companies, cryptocurrency platforms, aircraft manufacturers, and agricultural exporters, though European officials acknowledge consumers might face increased costs or limitations on American products and services.

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