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Macron warns Europe must wake up as US, China and Russia all 'dead against' them
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Politico EU4/24/2026Politics2 min read

Macron warns Europe must wake up as US, China and Russia all 'dead against' them

Quick Look

  • French President Emmanuel Macron warned Europeans to defend their own interests, stating that the US, Chinese and Russian presidents are all "dead against" them.
  • Speaking in Athens with Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Macron said tensions with the US would outlast Donald Trump, calling it a "historical trend." He flew to Athens after an EU meeting in Cyprus, where Greece and France are set to renew a bilateral security pact originally signed in 2021.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The article comes amid ongoing tensions between Europe and the US, particularly under the Trump administration. The 2021 bilateral security pact between Greece and France included a mutual defense clause and Greece's commitment to purchase at least €3 billion-worth of French warships. The renewal will extend this for five years with automatic renewal.

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Europeans have to step up and defend their own interests because the U.S., China and Russia are now all "dead against" them, French President Emmanuel Macron warned on Friday. "We should not underestimate that this is a unique moment where a U.S. president, a Russian president, a Chinese president are dead against the Europeans. So, this is the right moment for us to wake up," Macron said in a discussion with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis organized by the Kathimerini newspaper in Athens. "We have to be a little bit self-confident and deliver an agenda," he added. The French president also said he expected tensions with the U.S. to outlast President Donald Trump. "This is a historical trend," he said. "We can engage with the U.S. on some issues, and [that] still makes a lot of sense because of the common values and historical bonds, but I really believe that this U.S. approach will last," he added. He said the main difference between the first and second Trump terms was that many European countries thought the first term was an aberration that would end, not requiring fundamental changes. "Now, a lot of colleagues are more lucid, because after so many years, we say, okay, we have to react. We have to act as Europeans, to be more united, to defend ourselves our own interests. And for me, this is the right direction." Macron flew to Athens after an informal European Council meeting in Cyprus because Greece and France are set to sign the renewal of a bilateral security pact on Saturday. The signing seeks to update a pact reached in 2021 between Macron and Mitsotakis, which included a mutual defense clause and commitments from Greece to purchase at least €3 billion-worth of French warships. The renewal will extend it for a further five years, ​with an automatic renewal thereafter and is also expected to include new areas of cooperation, such as foreign policy, civil protection and the economy.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • More European countries will sign bilateral security agreements similar to the Greece-France pact

    Likely · Within months

  • EU will accelerate development of independent defense capabilities

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • What specific defense capabilities will the renewed pact include?
  • How will other European countries respond to Macron's call for greater strategic autonomy?
  • What new areas of cooperation will be included beyond defense?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Politico EU.

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