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 Iran Uses the War’s One-Month Mark to Intensify Pressure on Gulf States

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has used the one-month anniversary...

Technology and Cryptocurrency Sectors Face European Access Threats

The European Parliament has taken definitive action by suspending the US trade agreement ratification, responding to President Trump’s threat of 10% tariffs conditional on European support for his Greenland acquisition. This decision marks the strongest material response Brussels has delivered against what European leaders have termed blackmail tactics.

Trade committee chairman Bernd Lange established unequivocal terms for future negotiations, insisting that threats involving Greenland must end before any possibility of compromise exists. The suspended deal would have provided American exporters with zero-percent tariffs on many industrial products entering European markets.

Despite the trade deal freeze, the EU’s $750 billion energy purchase commitment remains fully intact. Lange confirmed this energy arrangement operates separately from the tariff negotiations, allowing Brussels to preserve energy cooperation while taking a principled stand.

The diplomatic chill became visible when Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, modified her post-parliamentary schedule. She cancelled a potential Davos meeting with Trump, returning directly to Brussels to coordinate emergency summit preparations for Thursday evening.

The crisis summit agenda includes evaluation of powerful response mechanisms available to the EU. Leaders will discuss imposing €93 billion in retaliatory tariffs and potentially activating an unprecedented anti-coercion instrument. Originally designed to counter Chinese economic pressure, this tool could enable Brussels to restrict US businesses from accessing European markets. The technology and cryptocurrency sectors face particular exposure, with companies potentially ranging from Apple and Netflix to various crypto platforms. Aircraft manufacturers and agricultural exporters also appear vulnerable. European officials acknowledge consumers might face increased costs or service limitations.

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