Since U.S. President Donald Trump took office just over a year ago, 
America’s relationship with the European Union has been little more than
 an afterthought. That shouldn’t be surprising. Trump’s views toward the
 EU have been consistently negative for years. During the presidential 
campaign he made several disparaging remarks about the EU, including 
that it was 
created to “beat
 the United States when it comes to making money.” He also openly 
supported Brexit. Making matters worse, Trump has forged a close 
relationship with Nigel Farage, the far-right, anti-immigration, 
anti-establishment leader of the U.K. Independence Party who has served 
as Trump’s tutor on the EU since late 2016. Despite Trump’s negatives 
views of the EU, though, it wasn’t clear over the past year exactly how 
those views would play out in terms of actual policies.
Until now. In recent days, Trump has launched a two-front war with the European Union.
At first, it appeared that the Trump administration’s policy toward the 
EU would simply be one of benign neglect. The president has yet to 
appoint an ambassador to the EU, and there are no signs that anyone at 
the White House is in a rush to change that. The EU also barely secured 
mentions in the various strategy documents the administration has been 
rolling out in recent months. In the 
National Security Strategy,
 the U.S. relationship with the European Union is cited only once in the
 context of “ensuring fair and reciprocal trade practices,” and 
“eliminating barriers to growth.” Similarly, in his sole speech on 
Europe, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson hardly mentioned the EU. In 
fact, America’s multibillion-dollar trade relationship with the EU, long
 the cornerstone of our relationship with Europe, doesn’t 
appear anywhere in that speech.
But this week, Trump 
announced he would place 25 percent tariffs on steel and 10 percent 
tariffs on aluminum imports. The move wasn’t directed specifically at 
Europe, as the United States imports steel and aluminum from several 
countries around the world. But that didn’t ease the shock of European 
policymakers who were stunned last Friday (like many of Trump’s own 
advisors and Congress) when Trump first mentioned that he was going to 
take actionable steps toward such a protectionist agenda.
Given the magnitude and importance of the United States’ trade 
relationship with Europe, one would assume that the president would 
create a special carve out for America’s closest allies. Trump made no 
mention of such an arrangement for Europe although the White House will 
create exemptions for Canada and Mexico.
EU officials are furious and have threatened retaliation through 
their own set of import tariffs. That obviously hasn’t sat well with the
 President who 
tweeted
 just days ago: “If the E.U. wants to further increase their already 
massive tariffs and barriers on U.S. companies doing business there, we 
will simply apply a tax on their cars which freely pour into the U.S.” 
Many are now predicting that the United States is on the verge of 
starting a trade war with Europe — and they might be right.
Unfortunately, trade isn’t the only area where the Trump 
administration is directly challenging the EU. The president and his 
advisors have also decided to take a hostile stance toward recent 
EU efforts
 to strengthen defense cooperation and integration across the Continent.
 This is an odd reaction given that over that past year Trump’s main 
criticism of Europe is that it shirks defense spending and 
burden-sharing.
To be sure, the United States has admittedly had a long,
 complicated past with European defense. Ever since Tony Blair and 
Jacques Chirac signed the Saint-Malo declaration in 1998, which 
recognized the need for Europe to develop autonomous, credible military 
forces, American presidents from Clinton to Bush to Obama have warned 
about unnecessary duplication with the NATO alliance.
But over time, even the strongest EU skeptics have come to realize 
two things. First, EU ambitions aren’t that great. Europeans aren’t 
trying to build an EU army. Second, to the extent that the EU makes 
progress on strengthening its defense forces, those efforts will 
ultimately benefit both the EU and NATO. That’s why the Trump 
administration’s approach toward the EU is so counterintuitive and 
counterproductive.
Whether it’s on trade policy or security policy, America needs a 
strong, economically sound, and capable Europe with close ties to the 
United States. Collectively, Europe and the United States face a litany 
of common challenges from Russian efforts to undermine Western 
democracies to instability across the Middle East to the need to prepare
 for the post-manufacturing economy. To effectively address these 
challenges, the United States and Europe need to act together. Doing so 
becomes increasingly difficult when the two continents are engaged in a 
trade war or when the Unite States pushes back on European efforts to 
build the exact capabilities we claim they lack.
The Trump 
administration needs an EU policy (and an ambassador to match) that can 
strengthen, not undermine, our relationship with Europe. It’s an 
imperfect relationship but it’s the best one we’ve got
Note EU-Digest: the EU Commission and Parliament  should, as the 
saying goes, "stop crying over spilled milk", since they knew even 
before the start of the US's Trump Administration, that Trump was not 
only a Populist and Nationalist, who embraced the idea of Brexit, but 
also  on very friendly terms with many European populists, like Farage, 
who he openly endorsed to become the British Ambassador to the US., and 
the list goes on and on. 
So given Trump's actions as the President of the US, at this point
 in time, it is certainly not wise for the EU Commission, or for that 
matter, most EU member states, to "snuggle-up" to the US's Trump 
Administration, as it has now been proven beyond any doubt, that Trump 
is only in favor of the EU, when he tells them to jump and  the EU 
responds with "how high Mr. Trump 
Given the above sequence of events the EU must show some more 
muscle in dealing with the US's Trump Administration and their policies,
 orchestrated by a narcissist, who, if we like it or not was elected 
President of the USA.   
Read more: Trump’s War on Europe Is Revving Up – Foreign Policy