What the rest of the world thinks
The view from Italy
Italy watches its Atlantic ally with mounting unease: There's a particular kind of anxiety that settles over a country when it watches a longtime ally become unpredictable. For Italians in the spring of 2026, that feeling has become all too familiar.
Walk into any bar in Milan or Rome these days, and conversations inevitably turn to America and to its leader. The consensus, as per our most recent polls, is striking: Nearly three in four Italians now view President Trump's handling of international affairs unfavorably — a sentiment that has only deepened in recent weeks as military tensions escalate in the Middle East.
The Italian perspective is shaped by a profound sense of vulnerability, driven by a feeling of living in an increasingly dangerous and fragmented world. This isn't mere pessimism; it's a practical concern for a nation that depends on global stability for its economic wellbeing. What troubles Italians most about American foreign policy isn't just the actions themselves, but the motivations they perceive behind them: Two out of three believe recent U.S. military decisions stem from domestic political calculations in Washington rather than genuine security imperatives — a cynicism born of watching too many international crises unfold in the past few years; crises that most struggle to make sense of.
Italy's preferred response speaks volumes: when asked about a potential involvement in the geopolitical arena, the vast majority want their country to remain neutral or actively work through institutions like the United Nations to restrain conflict, while barely one in ten support even diplomatic alignment with Washington. For a nation that once looked over the pond with admiration, the Atlantic has never felt wider.

Chiara Ferrari
Leader, Public Affairs, Ipsos in Italy
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