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United in Diversity
Wednesday, Jun 24, 2026

The Battle Over the Internet Explodes: The United States Bars European Officials and Ignites a Diplomatic Crisis

Washington bans five European figures over alleged censorship, prompting fierce backlash from Brussels and exposing a deeper struggle over the future control of the internet.
What began as a legal and technological dispute over the regulation of online content has, within a single day, escalated into a severe diplomatic crisis between the United States and Europe, evoking memories of the darker periods of the Cold War.

On Tuesday, the United States administration barred five European figures from entering the country, accusing them of leading efforts to impose censorship against the political right in the United States.

Among those affected is Thierry Breton, a former European Commissioner widely regarded as the architect of the Digital Services Act, currently the world’s most stringent regulatory framework governing major technology companies.

French President Emmanuel Macron reacted angrily, describing the move as “an act of intimidation”.

By Wednesday, Macron and other European Union leaders had launched a sharp public offensive against Washington following the announcement of the travel ban imposed on five key figures from Europe’s technology and regulatory sphere.

Alongside Breton, four prominent activists from German and British organisations focused on combating disinformation were placed on the blacklist.

These include Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, an organisation that has previously clashed directly with Elon Musk and published multiple studies on the spread of antisemitism and hate speech on the social media platform X.

Also named were Claire Melford, co-founder of the Global Disinformation Index, which ranks news websites according to their perceived risk of spreading disinformation and advises advertisers where not to place ads, and Josephine Ballon and Anna-Lena von Hodenberg, leaders of the German organisation HateAid, which provides legal assistance to victims of online abuse.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio made no attempt to soften the decision.

In a statement published on X, he accused the Europeans of orchestrating “an organised effort to force American platforms to punish American views they oppose”.

Rubio stated clearly that the Trump administration would no longer tolerate what he called “outrageous acts of extraterritorial censorship”.

In Europe, the move is widely seen as crossing a red line.

President Macron described the sanctions as “intimidation and coercion” aimed at undermining Europe’s digital sovereignty.

“Europe is not a colony of the United States,” declared Raphael Glucksmann, a socialist member of the European Parliament, in a direct address to Rubio.

“You have chosen to embrace dictators and confront democracies”.

Breton himself responded with characteristic sharpness, asking, “Has McCarthy’s witch hunt returned?” He added, “A reminder to our American friends: ninety percent of the European Parliament voted in favour of the Digital Services Act.

Censorship is not where you think it is”.

The current confrontation exposes a deep and widening divide between European and American conceptions of the internet.

At its core lies a fundamental clash between regulation and the free market.

Europe promotes the Digital Services Act, which imposes legal responsibility on platforms to remove illegal content such as incitement to terrorism or harm to minors.

The United States, by contrast, relies on Section Two Hundred Thirty, which grants platforms near-total immunity from liability.

From a conservative American perspective, the Digital Services Act is viewed as a mechanism for imposing progressive European norms on American companies.

The General Data Protection Regulation, which protects user privacy, is similarly seen in the United States as an obstacle to the ultra-capitalist free market model supported by the current administration.

Another key issue concerns the ranking of websites and the ability to pre-label outlets as sources of problematic content.

The Global Disinformation Index, whose co-founder was barred from entry, ranks news sites based on perceived disinformation risk to help advertisers avoid funding what some European countries even classify as criminal fake news, particularly when it includes incitement or political manipulation.

This activity closely resembles services provided in the United States by major commercial firms such as DoubleVerify or Integral Ad Science, which promise brands that their advertisements will not appear alongside harmful content.

The difference, in the view of the Trump administration, is that the Global Disinformation Index functions as a political tool designed to economically suffocate conservative right-wing media outlets, whereas commercial brand-safety tools are seen as more neutral.

The American decision is also part of a broader pattern involving the use of personal sanctions against officials in international institutions.

As recently as August, Washington imposed sanctions on French judge Nicolas Guillou of the International Criminal Court over his involvement in actions against Israeli officials and investigations concerning American figures.

Michel Duclos, a former senior French diplomat, described the sense of confusion in Europe: “A Russian envoy celebrates in Miami, while Breton is denied a visa.

Europe is becoming the ‘new Russia’ for Washington”.

His remarks highlight the paradox in which the United States appears to tighten ties with actors considered hostile to the West while simultaneously punishing traditional allies over regulatory disputes.

The American move has also intensified fears of a fragmented global internet, often referred to as a ‘splinternet,’ in which online networks become increasingly local, governed by divergent regulations and access rules.

Where concerns once focused on China’s ‘Great Firewall,’ two distinct Western blocs are now taking shape: a heavily regulated ‘European internet’ versus a largely ‘free,’ even anarchic, American internet.

As artificial intelligence becomes the next major battleground, regulatory differences are expected to deepen further.

Europe has already taken the lead with its Artificial Intelligence Act, while the United States fears such legislation could stifle Silicon Valley innovation.

At the same time, many early artificial intelligence regulation experts support restrictions until the potential harms of the technology are better understood, while China has advanced rapidly by allowing development to proceed unless clear dangers are identified.

The internet and social media have increasingly proven to be powerful tools for spreading political messaging and incitement on a scale far greater than a decade ago.

Current fears extend beyond rhetoric to the use of these technologies for cyberattacks and organised criminal activity.

Against this backdrop, the sanctions imposed on Europeans appear to be only the opening shot in a broader struggle over control of global digital consciousness engineering, with the European Union seeking full authority over what it promote as real and false realities presented to its citizens by the Eau unelected rulers, while President Trump’s United States, unlike the previous Biden’s administration that supported China-style censorship, advocates openness, democracy, and broad, modern freedom of expression.
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