US Attack on Europe: Report Reveals Washington & Big Tech’s “Pincer” Move to Destroy EU Rules

· 3 min read ·

A new report warns that the United States is waging an aggressive campaign, using its tech giants and far-right allies, to force Europe to abandon its laws and rewrite the global system—replacing international rules with raw American power [44570].

According to a detailed analysis by the Centre for European Reform, the US government is coordinating with Silicon Valley firms to exploit Europe’s dependence on American military protection as leverage. This creates a “pincer attack” on European regulators, the report alleges, with far-right politicians inside the EU acting as local allies for Washington’s agenda [44570]. The goal, according to author Armida van Rij, is to dismantle Europe’s ability to protect its own citizens, workers, and environment.

The warning comes as a senior Belgian official, Health Minister Frank Vandenbroucke, publicly accused the United States of launching an “ideological attack” against Europe’s social welfare systems. “The European Union is a protective shield against bilateral intimidation,” Vandenbroucke stated, arguing that the US is pressuring Europe to scrap its strong worker protections and public healthcare [78938].

This confrontation is unfolding across multiple fronts. Europe is locked in a struggle for “digital sovereignty,” as it remains deeply dependent on American tech firms like Microsoft, Google, and Visa for essential services, making any regulatory crackdown difficult to enforce [58167]. A separate report concludes that the EU’s reliance on regulation and moral arguments, instead of building real economic and military power, has made it dangerously vulnerable to exploitation by both the US and China [69895].

The transatlantic conflict is also visible in energy strategy. While the US under President Trump “doubles down” on fossil fuels, European nations are cashing in on a “green” shift, generating economic savings through renewable power and increasing their energy independence [88037]. Yet Brussels is simultaneously warning its members that the emergency spending to shield citizens from energy prices risks triggering a new fiscal crisis across the bloc [121783].

Meanwhile, Europe’s migration policy is under fire for mirroring the very aggression it publicly condemns. A new analysis reveals that while European leaders reject Trump’s harsh rhetoric, their “assertive migration diplomacy” uses aid and trade deals as weapons to force African nations into doing Europe’s dirty work—stopping migrants before they reach the EU’s borders [80997]. This outsourced border control shifts the burden onto poorer countries, often without benefiting their own development.

Economist Thomas Piketty argues that the US military moves—such as the intervention in Venezuela and conflict with Iran—are actually an “admission of weakness,” a “militaristic drift” meant to mask internal decline [95616]. He warns this path could lead to disaster, and insists Europe must now build its own independent global influence.

A senior European leader revealed the staggering cost of true military independence: outgoing Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Europe would need to spend up to €1 trillion—10% of its total economic output—to go it alone [60363]. But for now, the immediate priority remains a stronger European pillar within NATO, as the bloc scrambles to respond to what critics are calling the US “Donroe Doctrine,” which reportedly asserts that “resources belong to us” [43628].

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