Trump’s Pivot and the New Transatlantic Order


 Donald Trump’s second term has not restored the familiar rhythm of transatlantic cooperation. Instead, it has accelerated a shift that began during his first presidency, where security, diplomacy and economic power increasingly moved away from a shared strategic framework and toward a model defined by negotiation and conditional commitments.

Europe now faces a United States that treats support, access and guarantees as matters of exchange shaped by political and financial incentives. The ongoing negotiations in

Geneva as the New Fault Line

The latest round of negotiations in Geneva has crystallized the structural realignment of transatlantic relations.

This divergence reveals a deeper structural tension. Geneva has not only become the venue for negotiations on Ukraine; it has become the stage on which Washington and Europe test their competing visions of the post-war order.

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