EU Condemns US Travel Bans on Officials, Vows to Defend Digital Sovereignty

The European Commission has strongly condemned U.S. visa restrictions imposed on five European individuals, including former Commissioner Thierry Breton. French President Emmanuel Macron denounced the measures as "intimidation and coercion" aimed at undermining European digital sovereignty. The EU asserts its digital regulations were democratically adopted to ensure fair competition and safety online. Brussels has requested clarifications from U.S. authorities and warned it will act decisively to defend the bloc's regulatory autonomy.

Key Points: EU Slams US Travel Curbs, Warns of Swift Response

  • EU condemns US travel bans
  • Breton named as target
  • Macron calls it coercion
  • EU vows to defend regulatory autonomy
2 min read

EU slams US travel curbs on five Europeans

EU strongly condemns US visa restrictions on five Europeans, including Thierry Breton, calling it intimidation and vowing to defend digital sovereignty.

"These measures amount to intimidation and coercion aimed at undermining European digital sovereignty. - French President Emmanuel Macron"

Brussels, Dec 24

The European Commission on Wednesday strongly condemned a US decision to impose travel restrictions on five European individuals, including former European Commissioner Thierry Breton, warning it would act "swiftly and decisively" to defend the bloc's regulatory autonomy if needed.

"Freedom of expression is a fundamental right in Europe and a shared core value with the United States across the democratic world," a Commission spokesperson said in an attributable response to Xinhua.

The spokesperson stressed that the European Union is "an open, rules-based single market," and retains the sovereign right to regulate economic activity in line with its democratic values and international commitments.

The EU's digital rules are designed to ensure "a safe, fair, and level playing field for all companies," and are applied fairly and without discrimination, the spokesperson said, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The Commission has requested clarifications from US authorities and remains engaged, the spokesperson added.

The US State Department issued visa restrictions on five individuals from the EU and Britain in a statement on Tuesday, claiming that they are involved in content censorship on US social media platforms.

Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers later revealed the five names on X, including Breton, whom she claimed was "a mastermind of the Digital Services Act."

Earlier in the day, French President Emmanuel Macron criticised US visa restrictions against former European Commissioner for Internal Market Thierry Breton and four other European figures, calling the measures as "intimidation and coercion" aimed at undermining European digital sovereignty.

"France condemns the visa restriction measures taken by the United States against Thierry Breton and four other European figures. These measures amount to intimidation and coercion aimed at undermining European digital sovereignty. The European Union's digital regulations were adopted following a democratic and sovereign process by the European Parliament and the Council," Macron posted on X.

"They apply within Europe to ensure fair competition among platforms, without targetting any third country, and to ensure that what is illegal offline is also illegal online. The rules governing the European Union's digital space are not meant to be determined outside Europe. Together with the European Commission and our European partners, we will continue to defend our digital sovereignty and our regulatory autonomy," he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Interesting to see the West divided on digital rules. From an Indian perspective, we should watch this closely. We need our own strong digital sovereignty laws, like the DPDP Act, without being pressured by either the US or EU. Our regulations must serve Indian citizens first.
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Priya S
Visa restrictions for regulators? Really? This seems like a very petty move by the US. If you disagree with a law, debate it. Don't ban the people who made it. The EU is right to stand its ground. Every sovereign nation has the right to make its own rules for its market.
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Rohit P
Macron's statement is strong. "Digital sovereignty" is the key term here. Big Tech has had a free pass for too long. While the EU's approach has its flaws, the principle is correct. India must also ensure our data and our digital space are governed by our laws, not by Silicon Valley.
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Vikram M
A respectful criticism: Sometimes the EU's regulations are so complex they become a tool for protectionism. The US has a point about overreach, but their method of retaliation is childish. This tit-for-tat helps no one, especially not users or smaller businesses caught in the middle.
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Michael C
The US calling it "content censorship" and the EU calling it "ensuring a level playing field" shows the divide. Truth is probably in the middle. But banning officials from travel? That's an escalation no one needed. Hope they resolve this diplomatically soon.

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