The United States has warned of restrictions on major European Union service providers in retaliation for EU tech regulations targeting American companies. This escalation follows a $140 million fine imposed on Elon Musk's X under the EU's Digital Services Act, drawing sharp criticism from the Trump administration. European officials maintain that their rules ensure a fair playing field for all businesses.
The Office of the US Trade Representative issued a statement on X on Tuesday, highlighting what it described as discriminatory actions by the EU and certain member states against US service providers. These include lawsuits, taxes, fines, and directives. The post named nine EU firms—Spotify, Accenture, Amadeus, Mistral, Publicis, DHL, and others—as potential targets for US countermeasures.
“The European Union and certain EU Member States have persisted in a continuing course of discriminatory and harassing lawsuits, taxes, fines, and directives against US service providers,” the USTR stated.
This tension intensified after X became the first company fined under the EU's Digital Services Act, one of the world's strictest tech laws. The $140 million penalty, though below the maximum, prompted backlash from Vice President JD Vance, who labeled it “censorship” of the platform and its users. The USTR emphasized that US firms offer substantial free services to EU citizens, support millions of jobs, and invest over $100 billion in Europe, while EU providers have operated freely in the US market.
In response, a European Commission spokesperson affirmed the EU's commitment to defending its regulations. “The EU is an open and rules-based market, where companies from all over the world do business successfully and profitably,” the spokesperson said. “Our rules apply equally and fairly to all companies operating in the EU.”
The US indicated readiness to impose fees or restrictions on EU services if the pattern continues, framing it as a counter to “overseas extortion.” A November national security report from the Trump administration critiqued EU overregulation, warning it could undermine Europe's economy and military, potentially making the bloc “unrecognizable in 20 years or less.” Yet, it acknowledged Europe's strategic importance and robust sectors in manufacturing, technology, and energy.
Expert Johnny Ryan, in a Guardian op-ed, argued the EU holds leverage through the US's heavy reliance on AI investments, which he called a precarious “bubble.” He suggested steps like curbing exports of ASML's microchip-etching machines vital to Nvidia or stricter GDPR enforcement against data practices by firms like Meta and Google. Harvard professor Andy Wu noted AI's challenge: “Everyone can imagine how useful the technology will be, but no one has figured out yet how to make money.” Google CEO Sundar Pichai echoed concerns, stating in November that if AI investments falter, “no company is going to be immune, including us.”
Such moves could pressure the US economy, where AI drove 92 percent of GDP growth in the first half of the year, potentially affecting Trump's support base.