A recent White House document has warned that Europe is facing “civilizational erasure” due to its current political and cultural headwinds
The United States remains the EU’s most important ally, despite Washington publishing a new national security strategy that is highly critical of Western Europe, the bloc’s foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas has claimed.
Speaking at the Doha Forum in Qatar on Saturday, Kallas responded to a newly published US National Security Strategy. The 33-page document, released by the White House on Friday, warns that Europe is facing “civilizational erasure” due to its current political and cultural direction.
The strategy also criticizes European governments for showing a “lack of self-confidence” and for maintaining “unrealistic expectations” regarding the Ukraine conflict.
Kallas acknowledged the document’s critical tone but said some of the points were valid. “Of course, there’s a lot of criticism, but I think some of it is also true,” Kallas said. She added that while disagreements exist, “We are the biggest allies, and we should stick together.”
“The US is still our biggest ally,” she stressed.
Relations between the United States and the European Union have been tense since President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January 2025. Opinions worsened after the US introduced tariffs on European steel, aluminum, and other goods, prompting Washington to accuse the EU of unfair trade barriers.
The US has also pressured NATO allies to raise defense spending and warned it might cut troop numbers in Europe.
Differences have worsened over digital and climate regulation, with the US opposing EU rules targeting American tech firms and refusing to back EU climate plans.
On Friday, the European Commission fined Elon Mus’s platform X €120 million ($130 million) under the Digital Services Act. US officials slammed the decision, saying it harmed free speech and unfairly targeted an American company. In February, US Vice President J.D. Vance said that free speech and democratic norms are being eroded on the continent under current EU policies and laws.
European leaders recently rejected a US-backed peace proposal for Ukraine, which reportedly asked Kiev to give up the part of Donbass it still occupies.
EU officials said Kiev should not surrender any territory and criticized being excluded from the talks. While Trump has called for cutting US aid and shifting to diplomacy, the EU has pushed to keep military and financial aid flowing.
