Skip to content
Apply
Stories

European leaders weigh ‘trade bazooka’ against the US. Here’s what that might mean for the economy

People in this story

In December 2021, when China moved to freeze trade relations with Lithuania after a diplomatic spat involving the opening of a “Taiwanese” representative office in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius, European leaders sought leverage against Beijing’s use of what they described as economic coercion.  

The result was the adoption of a legal tool in 2023 designed to fight fire with fire: an “anti-coercion” instrument, or ACI, that gives the European Commission the authority to impose countermeasures to deter threats, such as those made China against Lithuania. 

Now, amid fresh tension between the Trump administration and European leaders over Greenland, the EU is threatening to deploy its ACI, the so-called “trade bazooka,” to stop the United States from exerting economic pressure to achieve a political objective.

“It is a pretty new policy instrument for the EU,” said Mai’a Cross, dean’s professor of political science, international affairs and diplomacy at Northeastern University, and an expert on international relations, space diplomacy and European security. She said it would be the first time Europe would look to activate the policy since its adoption in 2023. 

Read more on Northeastern Global News

More Stories

Researchers say fossil fuel companies’ communications facade

04.06.2026

Artemis II space launch ‘politically important’ in new era of space competition, expert says

04.01.2026

These Boston neighborhoods have heat and noise problems. This sensor project is helping address it

04.09.26
All Stories