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Signal Texts Reveal White House’s Growing Resentment Toward Europe


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Inside the Trump White House’s Growing Resentment Toward Europe

 

The recent leak of a White House Signal group chat was more than just an intelligence blunder—it revealed a deeper frustration within Donald Trump’s administration about what officials see as Europe’s chronic dependency on American military power.

 

A stunning moment in the chat occurred when Vice President JD Vance hesitated as his colleagues, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, debated striking Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels. Vance, messaging from an economics event in Michigan, voiced his reservations. “I think we are making a mistake,” he wrote. He pointed out that while only 3% of U.S. trade flows through the Suez Canal, Europe relies on it for 40% of its trade. He worried that the American public might not grasp the necessity of the strikes and questioned whether the president realized how inconsistent this was with his stance on Europe. Vance suggested waiting a month before moving forward.

 

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His resistance, however, was quickly countered by his colleagues, who reassured him while simultaneously taking aim at transatlantic allies. Hegseth, without hesitation, agreed with Vance’s underlying skepticism of Europe, writing, “I fully share your loathing of European freeloading. It’s PATHETIC.” White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller reinforced the point, stating, “As I heard it, the president was clear: green light, but we soon make clear to Egypt and Europe what we expect in return.” In the end, Vance fell in line with the majority, but not before making his frustration clear. “I just hate bailing Europe out again,” he said.

 

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While the conversation shocked European officials, the underlying sentiment is nothing new. U.S. frustration with Europe’s defense spending has been a bipartisan issue for decades. As far back as the 1960s, President John F. Kennedy called out European allies for failing to meet their obligations. In 2011, Barack Obama’s Defense Secretary, Robert Gates, warned that NATO’s future was bleak unless its members increased their military spending. Both Trump and Joe Biden have continued to press the issue. Even before last year’s presidential election, British and European defense experts had anticipated that if Kamala Harris won, she too would echo similar frustrations, though in a more diplomatic manner.

 

 

Trump has gone further than his predecessors, even threatening to withhold military aid from NATO members who fail to meet their financial commitments. That pressure has led to some European nations ramping up their defense budgets. Yet within Trump’s circle, Vance’s resentment toward Europe appears to go beyond just military spending. He sees European leaders not just as freeloaders but as an elite class disconnected from American values. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference in February, he stunned European officials with his scathing remarks: “If you’re running in fear of your own voters, there is nothing America can do for you—nor for that matter is there anything that you can do for the American people who elected me and elected President Trump.”

 

Vance’s worldview has been shaped over years alongside a group of like-minded advisors, many of whom, like him, are veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They returned home disillusioned with American interventionism and now occupy key positions in the administration. In the leaked Signal chat, two names stood out: Andy Baker, a former foreign service officer and Vance’s national security adviser, and Dan Caldwell, an Iraq War veteran with ties to both Hegseth and Vance. Caldwell has been a leading advocate for a doctrine of “restraint,” which rejects both Reagan-era peace-through-strength policies and Obama-style global engagement.

 

This hardline stance has alienated even some of Trump’s natural allies. Nigel Farage, a longtime Trump supporter, was particularly angered when Vance seemed to dismiss Britain as a “random country that has not fought a war in 30 or 40 years.” Although Vance later denied the comment, Farage was blunt in his assessment. “I was angry about that,” he said. “The Republican party as a whole is—well, it’s America first. I mean, that’s what they feel, and that’s what they believe, and they think Europe’s been taking the mickey out of it for 60 years.”

 

However, Farage noted that Vance’s background might make him even less sympathetic to Europe than Trump himself. “I’ve never known JD to be anti-British,” he said, “but he is less pro-British than Donald Trump.”

 

This growing rift between the U.S. and its European allies raises questions about the future of transatlantic relations. If Trump’s administration views Europe as an unreliable partner, the continent may have to prepare for a future where American military and economic support is no longer a guarantee.

 

Based on a report by The Telegraph  2025-03-27

 

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Posted
8 minutes ago, Yagoda said:

Thats assuming that the addition of the known liar and operative Goldberg was not criminal and was deliberate. Isnt it "odd" that a scum like him was included?

 

Im betting criminal, although your scenario is extremely possible. Thanks for demonstrating some folks still know how to think as opposed to just spittlespew.

 

I'll add to the intrigue. Discover the nefarious addition of Goldberg in the app, deliver the truth bomb using Goldberg as the useful idiot, and then claim criminal interference for the release of the information. Smoke and mirrors - works for me, especially as nobody has been made to fall on their sword over it. :coffee1:

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Posted
Just now, Gsxrnz said:

 

I'll add to the intrigue. Discover the nefarious addition of Goldberg in the app, deliver the truth bomb using Goldberg as the useful idiot, and then claim criminal interference for the release of the information. Smoke and mirrors - works for me, especially as nobody has been made to fall on their sword over it. :coffee1:

Nice concept.

 

1. Message to Vlad

2. Message to Europe

3. Payback to Unpardoned scum.

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Posted
1 hour ago, Gsxrnz said:

It seems odd to me that what was "leaked" is a mature adult conversation that raises some serious foreign policy questions, is extremely strategical in nature, shows a distinct lack of simply agreeing with the boss, in fact shows a demonstrated willingness to challenge the agenda.

 

If you wanted to send a clear and decisive message to the Europeans about what the inner thoughts of the US cabinet really are towards their allies, while showing the voters that you have their back both from a military and geo-political perspective, well....if I was a strategist I would have recommended this method.

 

An age-old negotiation trick is to surreptitiously drop a truth bomb into your opponent's lap while smiling pleasantly to their face and raising your pinky while enjoying tea and crumpets with them.

 

Maybe Trump read Clavell's Shogun and is doing a Toranaga style palace intrigue on them all. :coffee1:

Ye p -I think the White House deliberately added the journalist to that Signal group....

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Posted

A lot of noise about not very much. EU elitists should recognize that the USA has done more than it's fair share of heavy lifting over the years. The EU never will of course, their self-importance dominates their thinking on all issues.

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