The European Parliament has officially suspended the US trade deal ratification, directly responding to President Trump’s threat of 10% tariffs unless Europe backs his Greenland acquisition plans. This decision represents the most substantial material response Brussels has delivered against what multiple European leaders characterized as blackmail.
Trade committee head Bernd Lange made the EU’s position unambiguous, declaring that compromise remains impossible while threats concerning Greenland persist. The suspended agreement had promised American exporters unprecedented access to European markets with zero tariffs on numerous industrial goods.
Despite the trade deal suspension, the EU’s commitment to purchase $750 billion in American energy remains fully operational. Lange confirmed this energy arrangement exists independently from the tariff negotiations, demonstrating Brussels’ selective approach to the crisis.
The deteriorating diplomatic atmosphere became evident when Ursula von der Leyen revised her travel plans, returning to Brussels to prepare for an emergency summit.
The parliamentary suspension represents substantive material response rather than purely rhetorical opposition to Trump’s tactics. While European leaders have condemned the approach verbally, the trade deal suspension translates words into concrete action with real economic consequences. This distinction matters because rhetorical opposition without material backing often proves ineffective against Trump’s approach. By actually halting ratification rather than merely criticizing while proceeding, Brussels demonstrates willingness to accept economic costs to defend principles. The Thursday summit will examine whether to escalate further with €93 billion in counter-tariffs.
