If Europeans were truly informed—or even half awake—they would be outraged. But they’re not. Because no one is telling them the truth.
The newly publicized EU-U.S. economic and energy agreement, quietly pushed through under the guise of “strategic cooperation,” is not a partnership. It’s a tribute—a historic wealth transfer from Europe to the United States with no reciprocal benefits.
Let’s break it down:
- The EU drops tariffs on American imports but is hit with a 15% tariff on its own exports to the U.S.
- The EU agrees to invest $600 billion in the U.S. economy—without clear returns, without protections, without any visible national interest served.
- The EU commits to purchasing hundreds of billions in American military hardware, further tying its sovereignty to Washington’s war machine.
- And most shockingly, the EU signs on to a $750 billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) deal—paying $250 billion annually for U.S. energy exports that are far more expensive than alternatives.
And what does the EU get in return? Nothing.
No access concessions. No guarantees of equal trade terms. No collaborative defense clause. No mutual investment reciprocity. Just silence—and submission.
This Isn’t Diplomacy. It’s Extraction.
This kind of deal doesn’t resemble an agreement between sovereign equals. It resembles the kind of unequal treaties that colonial empires once imposed on defeated nations. Only this time, Europe is the vassal.
There is no political dignity in this arrangement. There is no economic logic. And there is certainly no democratic mandate for it—because no citizen in Europe voted for their sovereignty to be auctioned off like this.
A Dangerous Precedent
What’s worse is what this signals moving forward. In geopolitics, capitulation breeds escalation. The U.S. has now seen that it can extract vast concessions from Europe without resistance. Do you think this stops here? Of course not.
In the 19th century, colonial powers didn’t stop after their first lopsided treaty. They kept going—demanding more, stripping nations of autonomy, and locking them into a cycle of dependence and economic servitude.
That’s exactly the path the EU is now being nudged onto.
And unless Europe wakes up—unless its leaders start leading with courage rather than obedience—this will be remembered as the beginning of its century of humiliation. This isn’t about being anti-American. It’s about being pro-sovereignty, pro-transparency, and pro-accountability.
If Europe wishes to maintain its independence, its prosperity, and its identity, it must say no to economic self-sabotage dressed up as diplomacy. Otherwise, history won’t be kind.