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European Countries Confront Trump’s Hormuz Demands with Unified Refusal

European nations confronted Donald Trump’s Hormuz demands with a unified refusal this week, declining to provide warships and insisting that a negotiated diplomatic solution was the only credible path forward. Trump had framed military deployment as a NATO obligation and warned of serious consequences for the alliance if allies failed to respond. But European governments were consistent in their view that the conflict had not been of their making and that military involvement without a clear mandate and shared strategy was unjustifiable.
Germany’s response combined firmness with principle. Chancellor Friedrich Merz ruled out any military role and grounded the refusal in lessons from past conflicts about the inadequacy of bombing as a tool of political change. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius made a sharp practical point, challenging the premise of Trump’s request by asking what a small European fleet could contribute where the United States Navy had not succeeded. Their combined position made Germany the most outspoken European opponent of the military approach.
Britain’s Keir Starmer occupied careful middle ground, acknowledging the global stakes and promising a viable plan while avoiding any specific commitment. He made clear the UK would not be drawn into the wider conflict without broad multilateral support. Trump remained dissatisfied with London’s position but appeared to retain some hope that Britain would find a way to contribute, keeping the relationship tense but intact.
Italy, France, Greece, Japan, and Australia each declined participation, and the EU’s foreign ministers voted effectively against expanding Operation Aspides to the Hormuz area. EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas confirmed the decision, noting the absence of member state appetite for changing the mission’s mandate. Estonia’s foreign minister gave voice to broader European frustrations by calling on Washington and Tel Aviv to clarify their strategic goals.
The conflict between Israel and Iran continued to intensify. Israel launched fresh strikes on Iranian cities and announced detailed operational plans for coming weeks. Iran rejected ceasefire proposals and launched retaliatory missiles at Israel, which were intercepted. Drone attacks disrupted UAE oil operations and caused fires near Dubai. US military casualties reached 13 dead and over 200 wounded, while rights groups placed the total death toll in Iran at more than 1,800 people.

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