Trump floats 200% tariff on French wines, champagne if Macron snubs Board of Peace invite
· The Straits TimesUS President Donald Trump took shots at French leader Emmanuel Macron for rejecting his invitation to join a proposed Board of Peace, and suggested he could impose a 200 per cent tariff on champagne in retaliation.
“Well, nobody wants him because he’s going to be out of office very soon,” Mr Trump told reporters on Jan 19, after being informed that Mr Macron would decline his invitation
. “I’ll put a 200 per cent tariff on his wines and champagnes and he’ll join,” he added.
The president also published a text message from his French counterpart
in which Mr Macron invited Mr Trump to have dinner in Paris on Jan 22.
Mr Macron also proposed meetings with Ukraine, Syria, Denmark and Russia to address a range of issues, including Mr Trump’s demand to take Greenland from Denmark, citing security issues.
“I do not understand what you are doing on Greenland,” Mr Macron told Mr Trump in the text, which was confirmed by a French official.
As he heads to the World Economic Forum in Davos this week, Mr Trump is stoking a series of disputes with European leaders.
He has threatened eight European countries with tariffs for opposing his Greenland demands, attacked Norway for denying him the Nobel Peace Prize, and now he is trying to force France to join his so-called Board of Peace alongside autocrats such as Mr Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus and even Russia’s Mr Vladimir Putin.
Initially conceived to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza, the mandate of the so-called Board of Peace is mushrooming and Trump appears to see it as a vehicle to resolve other conflicts and shape other international events, according to several European officials.
According to a draft charter for the proposed group seen by Bloomberg, Mr Trump would serve as its inaugural chairman and would have authority over membership decisions.
The Trump administration is asking countries that want a permanent spot on the body to contribute at least US$1 billion (
S$1.28 billion
)
.
Mr Macron does not plan to accept the invitation, a person close to the French leader said earlier. Mr Macron believes the charter goes beyond Gaza, the person said, and raises significant concerns, particularly over respect for the principles and institutional framework of the United Nations, which France considers non-negotiable.
The person said that Mr Macron believes its unacceptable for Mr Trump to seek to influence French foreign policy by making threats and he is determined not to back down. China has also been invited.
The fear for the Europeans is that the disputes over Greenland, over trade, and over the peace board are part of a broader breakdown in the transatlantic relationship, which could call into question US commitment to European security and the NATO military alliance.
NATO chief Mark Rutte has been laser focused on keeping Mr Trump engaged with the alliance since he took over as secretary-general in 2024, often adopting a tone of extreme deferrence to the US leader.
In a flurry of late night posts, Mr Trump also published a text in which Mr Rutte lauded the success of a US strike on suspected Islamic State militants in Syria.
“What you achieved in Syria today is incredible,” Mr Rutte said in the text, which was confirmed by a NATO official.
“I will use my media engagements in Davos to highlight your work there, in Gaza, and in Ukraine.”
Mr Trump also revealed private texts from Mr Rutte ahead of the NATO summit in 2025 and Mr Rutte chose to brush it off.
In a further provocation to Washington’s traditional allies, Mr Trump criticised British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s plans to return sovereignty of Diego Garcia
– an island that houses a crucial military base – to Mauritius, reversing his previous support for the proposal.
“Shockingly, our ‘brilliant’ NATO Ally, the United Kingdom, is currently planning to give away the Island,” Mr Trump said.
“There is no doubt that China and Russia have noticed this act of total weakness.”
Mr Trump also published what appeared to be an AI mock-up that showed the president speaking to European leaders in the Oval Office in front of a map that showed not just Greenland but also Canada as US territory.
Mr Trump caused consternation in Canada in 2025 when he floated the idea that the country could become the 51st US state, and idea that was categorically rejected by Prime Minister Mark Carney.
Mr Carney is another world leader who is set to snub Mr Trump’s Board of Peace, according to people familiar with his thinking.
The UK, Sweden, the Netherlands and Germany are also set to decline Mr Trump’s invitation to take part, the people said.
Mr Trump wants the full constitution and remit of the committee signed in Davos, Switzerland on Jan 22, according to people familiar with the matter. But some elements of the small print have left invitees wondering whether to accept.
Those European countries avoiding the Board of Peace have also been targeted by Mr Trump for offering their support to Denmark as the president ramps up the pressure over Greenland.
European Union leaders are due to hold an emergency summit this week to discuss their response.
The bloc is ready to impose tariffs on €93 billion (S$139 billion) of US goods if Mr Trump follows through on his threat to hit European countries with a 10 per cent levy on Feb 1, and Mr Macron is pushing for EU to activate the so-called Anti-Coercion Instrument, a powerful tool which gives officials sweeping powers to curb access to the EU market. BLOOMBERG