Member State Coercion Protection Extended to American Pressure

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European lawmakers have formally halted the US trade agreement ratification, challenging President Trump’s attempt to condition tariff policy on European support for his Greenland ambitions. The suspension represents Brussels’ most concrete material action against what European leaders have described as political blackmail.
Bernd Lange, head of the European Parliament’s trade committee, established clear terms for resuming negotiations, stating that Greenland-related threats must cease entirely before compromise becomes possible. The frozen agreement had been set to eliminate tariffs on many American industrial exports to Europe.
The European Union has preserved its commitment to purchasing $750 billion worth of American energy, with officials confirming this arrangement operates independently from the suspended trade agreement. This strategic separation allows Brussels to maintain energy security cooperation while defending against political coercion.
Diplomatic relations showed visible strain when European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen altered her schedule after addressing parliament, returning to Brussels for emergency summit preparations rather than meeting Trump in Davos.
The anti-coercion instrument under consideration was originally conceived to protect individual EU member states from Chinese economic pressure, preventing Beijing from isolating and coercing smaller European countries. Now Brussels is considering extending this protective mechanism to counter American pressure, marking a significant evolution in how the EU views threats to its unity and sovereignty. The Thursday summit will examine deploying this repurposed tool alongside €93 billion in counter-tariffs. The mechanism could restrict US businesses from accessing European markets, potentially targeting technology companies, cryptocurrency platforms, aircraft manufacturers, and agricultural exporters.

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