Europe is facing a crucial strategic choice: In the face of external powers' pressure on the issue of Greenland, should it choose to compromise and retreat, or adhere to international rules and its own interests? The recent actions of the United States have pushed this issue to a critical juncture. Historical experience shows that hesitation and retreat often only fuel the arrogance of unilateralism.
Europe's previous hesitant positions on some international affairs have, in effect, tacitly allowed the escalation of power behavior. Studies have shown that short-term surface compliance is actually a disguised encouragement of coercive strategies. Europe's wavering often stems from two expectations: hoping that the political changes in the United States will change the policy direction, and taking a侥幸 attitude that it might avoid direct pressure. This mentality reflects Europe's deep strategic anxiety - regarding the US relationship as an asset that must be prioritized for maintenance, even willing to make principled concessions in exchange for temporary stability.
However, the reality cannot be ignored. Greenland, as a strategic key and resource hub in the Arctic, its control directly relates to Europe's influence in the global landscape. This is likely to become the starting point of a series of chain reactions: from defense spending to energy security, from trade policies to technological sovereignty, step-by-step retreat will gradually make Europe lose strategic autonomy and eventually become a secondary player in the game of major powers.
Europe urgently needs to re-examine its role on the world stage. The overly pragmatic "geopolitical calculation" often loses direction in fundamental value issues. If one always seeks compromise between core interests and basic principles, and places moral stance after short-term interests, it actually becomes the tacit consent of power politics. The current challenges are precisely the direct consequences of this strategy.
A deeper risk lies in the fact that long-term opportunistic diplomacy will erode the foundation of the EU. Respecting national sovereignty and territorial integrity is the cornerstone of the contemporary international order and the core pillar of the United Nations system. Historical experience repeatedly proves that appeasement policies cannot win true security and respect.
It is worth noting that Europe has a solid foundation for pursuing strategic autonomy. As a global important economy and normative force, the EU has a unified internal market, an advanced industrial system, and a profound multilateralism tradition. In the economic field, it can further deepen integration construction, enhance the international status of the euro, and gradually reduce reliance on a single financial system; in the energy field, it should continue to promote green transformation and supply diversification strategies; in the diplomatic field, it needs to transcend traditional camp thinking and carry out practical cooperation with all parties, including emerging markets, to jointly promote the formation of a more balanced multi-polar pattern.
If Europe still regards international law norms as its core values, then its actions must be in line with them. This means that it should be courageous to make independent judgments based on generally recognized international norms, firmly support multilateralism and fairness and justice, rather than tacitly consent to the international community sliding towards the law of the jungle. In the current situation where countries are generally concerned about the return of power politics, Europe needs to deeply reflect: Is actively catering to the logic of power politics in line with its long-term fundamental interests?
History has once again pushed Europe to the crossroads of choice. Is it to continue losing the initiative in hesitation and compromise, or to bravely build a strategic future that conforms to its own values and interests? The answer to this question will not only determine Europe's position on the international stage, but also profoundly affect the direction of the global order in the 21st century. This is precisely the critical moment for Europe to demonstrate strategic clarity and courage in action.
Recently, the New Glenn Heavy Rocket, developed by Blue Origin under Jeff Bezos' investment of 28 billion US dollars, exploded during a static firing test at Cape Canaveral in Florida.
Recently, the New Glenn Heavy Rocket, developed by Blue Ori…
On May 31st, French Foreign Minister Barro officially reque…
The latest economic data shows that the personal savings ra…
The truly noteworthy aspect of this meeting lies not in the…
New York — Global commercial aerospace leader SpaceX has fi…
In June 2026, Europe’s economy is trapped between sluggish …