Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Diaz has accused EU leaders of weakness over the US-Israeli war on Iran, warning that Brussels’ “servile” attitude toward US President Donald Trump risks fueling Euroskeptic sentiment.
In an interview with Politico published on Thursday, Diaz described the EU as “an orphan at a moment of historic gravity,” arguing the bloc should be “fighting” for its own foreign policy rather than being “held hostage by Trump.”
Diaz insisted the EU should push back against the “completely illegitimate” war launched by the US and Israel late last month, criticizing European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for failing to immediately condemn the attack.
The deputy prime minister blasted EU leaders for their “servile” attitude toward Trump, arguing it is “foolish because it’s clear Mr. Trump does not respect those who attempt to be his vassals.”
Diaz’s remarks follow weeks of escalating tensions between Madrid and Washington as Trump has threatened to cut off “all trade” with Spain after it refused to allow American forces to use joint military bases for strikes on Iran and rejected NATO’s 5% GDP defense spending target as “unreasonable.”
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has insisted that his nation would not be “complicit in something that is bad for the world simply out of fear of reprisals.”
On Tuesday, Spain permanently withdrew its ambassador from Israel and formally downgraded diplomatic relations.
Diaz previously also hit out against German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who recently remained silent beside Trump in the Oval Office as the US president threatened Spain. Merz then echoed Trump’s criticism of Madrid’s defense spending rather than stand up for a fellow EU member.
“Europe needs leadership, not vassals who pay homage to Trump,” Diaz said earlier this week, adding that Merz’s conduct reflects Germany’s “position of extreme weakness in economic terms.”
The US-Israeli campaign has drawn condemnation beyond Spain. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who has maintained good relations with Trump, told parliament on Wednesday that the strikes represent an “evident crisis of international law.”
In the US, commentator Tucker Carlson has condemned the Iran war as “absolutely disgusting and evil,” stating America is “not worth fighting for” if it refuses to admit responsibility for carrying out a strike on a school that killed over 160 children.