Europe is in far greater economic trouble that most people realize. In anApril 2026 reportby the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), it was reveled that the UK's GDP per capita is lower than all 50 U.S. states, including the poorest, Mississippi. While the majority of Britons mistakenly believe the UK is as wealthy or wealthier than the US, data shows the UK's average income lags behind the lowest-performing US states, highlighting a significant economic gap.
The quiet decline of the once mighty British Empire right under the nose of the general populace is just one of many examples of Europe not understanding their own precarious economic circumstances.
Far-left governments on the other side of the Atlantic have openly sought to sabotage conservative political movements, imposing authoritarian lawfare and mass censorship in order to prevent losing their grip on power. The globalist leadership in these countries has designated the Trump Administration and US nationalist groups as a "bad influence" on their own citizens.
The key conflict is about forced third world immigration and forced multiculturalism. Leftist politicians desperately want this process to continue, but the US is enforcing a migrant reversal, which makes Europeans wonder why their governments are not doing the same? The juxtaposition is embarrassing and makes the liberal agenda more difficult.
Because of this snub against the multicultural project, the Trump Administration's scrutiny of European censorship, tariff's against nations that had their own tariffs on US goods and Trump's demand that NATO countries pay their fair share in defense, the elitists across the pond have turned sour on theirrelationship with America.
They have been noticeably interested in undermining US operations in the Gulf against Iran, denying the US access to airspace and making things unnecessarily complicated. One can theorize the deeper motives behind this decision (the presence of 50 million Muslims in Europe, many of them migrants, might explain the apprehension to do anything that might be seen as European hostility to Iran), but it's clear that the behavior of some EU leaders has grown increasingly petty.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz recently sparked intense controversy by stating that the U.S. is being "humiliated" by Iran and lacks a clear strategy in the conflict, calling the situation "ill-considered". It's difficult to understand this assertion without knowing Merz's definition of "humiliation".
With the majority of Iran's leadership dead or incapacitated, at least half of their missile stock destroyed and Trump's reverse blockade crushing the Iranian economy within just a couple weeks ($1 US dollar is currently equal to around 1.8 million Rial), one has to wonder what success looks like to the Germans (perhaps an old-school blitzkrieg would impress them more).
It doesn't really matter, because Merz's comments were met with a sharp response from the Trump Admin, and now it is likely that US bases in the country will soon be shut down. Upon hearing this news, Merz suddenly changed his tune and praised the US partnership with Germany:
"The United States is and will remain Germany‘s most important partner in the North Atlantic Alliance. We share a common goal: Iran must not be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons..."
Source: ZeroHedge News