‘Alleati, non vassalli’: come la rottura della Meloni con il presidente degli Stati Uniti è diventata un momento politico per l’Italia

https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20260417-allies-not-vassals-how-meloni-break-with-trump-became-political-moment-italy

di Massimo25ore

12 commenti

  1. Massimo25ore on

    It was on a government plane somewhere between Verona and Rome that Itay’s PM Giorgia Meloni learned that US President Donald Trump had called her “unacceptable”. Her aides had flagged an interview the US president had given to Corriere della Sera published on April 14. She read it. Then, according to the Italian daily’s account, the far-right PM settled on a line she had already used that afternoon: “Being allies does not mean there are no red lines, and it certainly does not mean being vassals or subjects.”

    Trump had been blunt. “I’m shocked at her. I thought she had courage, but I was wrong,” he said in the Corriere interview. His grievances were twofold: Meloni’s refusal to back the US-led war on Iran and her condemnation of his attacks on Pope Leo XIV as “unacceptable”. “She is the one who is unacceptable,” Trump added, “because she doesn’t care if Iran has a nuclear weapon and would blow up Italy in two minutes if it had the chance”.

    The dispute also comes against the backdrop of Rome’s decision to suspend the renewal of a defence cooperation agreement with Israel, further fuelling tensions.

    The exchange sent shockwaves across Italian political life, though not quite in the direction Trump may have intended.

    Back at the Palazzo Chigi (the official residence of Italian prime ministers) by late afternoon, Meloni’s government moved quickly. Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, also head of the centre-right Forza Italia party, and Defence Minister Guido Crosetto posted near-identical messages on social media emphasising national interest and Italy’s dignity as an ally. “We are and remain staunch supporters of Western unity and steadfast allies of the United States, but this unity is built on mutual loyalty, respect, and honesty,” Tajani wrote.

    The front pages the following morning told the story of a rare political consensus. La Repubblica described the moment as one of Italian unity, framing Meloni’s pushback as a “new Maginot line” against what it called the “unpredictable man occupying the White House”. Il Giornale, on the right of the spectrum, celebrated an “Italy first” stance.

    Suspending the Israel defence deal

    Meloni also made another move that underlined the new direction. “In view of the current situation, the government has decided to suspend the automatic renewal of the defence agreement with Israel,” she announced on the sidelines of the Verona event. An Italian diplomatic source confirmed the suspension to AFP, saying bluntly: “It would have been politically difficult to keep it going.”

    The agreement, approved by Israel in 2006 and renewed every five years, covers cooperation across defence industries, military training, research and development and information technology.

    The move followed a sharp deterioration in bilateral ties. Tensions between the two countries had risen after the Italian government accused Israeli forces of firing warning shots at a convoy of Italian UN peacekeepers in Lebanon, damaging at least one vehicle. Italy summoned Israel’s ambassador in protest on April 8. Israel then summoned Italy’s ambassador after Tajani condemned what he called “unacceptable attacks” on Lebanese civilians during a visit to Beirut.

    While the suspension marks a visible break, its practical impact may be limited. “The choice not to renew the defence cooperation agreement with Israel is politically significant,” said Daniele Amoroso, a professor of international law at the University of Cagliari, “but its importance should not be exaggerated. It is likely to be more symbolic than substantive.”

  2. arcwh1sper on

    It’s wild seeing Meloni positioned as the “defender of Italian dignity” against Trump of all people. Maybe worth watching how this translates into concrete policy inside NATO rather than just symbolic rhetoric.

  3. EURSTYLE on

    This just goes to show how much you can trust an ultra-nationalist as an ally. Everybody gangsta until history slaps you in the face and shows you that your real interest lies in European unity.

  4. nous_serons_libre on

    >’Allies, not vassals’

    Not a given everywhere in Europe

  5. ExplosivePancake9 on

    She may be an idiot, but she is our idiot!

    Also you know, the comments about Italy “not helping the U.S” being very ironic, and being even more ironic as we are approaching the anniversary of the U.S entering WW1, a war in wich Italy helped the U.S so much it could be argued it kickstarted their entire air force.

  6. Pink_Flying_Pig_ on

    It’s not what it seems.

    Meloni’s governement in sinking, she saw who Orban ended and she’s trying to relocate his political agenda. Same shit, “different” ideas.

  7. She’s just following the mass here, as everyone and their cat in the Catholic Christian world too realized that Trump and his administration are full of crap to the bones (about time, eh, we told you so), she smelled that the wave was changing direction and chose to ride it, further demonstrating that she’s just there for approval. Don’t fall for it, she’s the same broken clock as before, it just happens that she’s now pointing to the right time, but time flows and it will last only until she finds it convenient.

  8. PatientInitial882 on

    *””We are and remain staunch supporters of Western unity and steadfast allies of the United States, but this unity is built on mutual loyalty, respect,* ***and honesty****,” Tajani wrote.”*

    Hoooo boy. Those are fighting words. This is Italy calling the US a liar.

    It really is amazing, the speed at which the US is turning loyal allies into countries just itching for a fight.

    Now I wonder where the US Democrats are, and if they even give a fuck.

  9. StrangerConscious637 on

    Long live Italy! Long live Europe! To hell with American fascists.

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