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How Italy’s Transatlantic line runs through New York

Giorgia Meloni
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s address to the 80th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) was more than a protocol-style speech. It is a strategic declaration positioning Italy as an operative bridge between Europe and the United States — aligning with Washington’s priorities while keeping a distinctively European frame.

Giorgia Meloni is carving out a role that few other European leaders can claim: a consistent interlocutor for the Trump administration that remains credible inside the EU.

The substance. She presented Italy as a connector across the Atlantic from Ukraine to Gaza, from UN reform to migration and the green transition.

  • This dual positioning reflects Italy’s geopolitical ambitions and Meloni’s personal strategy to balance sovereignty, pragmatism, and Western solidarity.

Main issues:

  • Ukraine: Meloni condemned Russia’s aggression, stressing the violation of the UN Charter and reaffirming Italy’s complete alignment with the US and NATO line.
  • Gaza: She struck a calibrated tone: support for Israel’s right to defend itself, criticism of disproportionate civilian suffering, and endorsement of a two-state solution — echoing both European sensitivities and Washington’s evolving posture.
  • Migration: Meloni pushed for updated international conventions, focusing on human trafficking and state sovereignty — themes she also framed for domestic and EU audiences.
  • Green Deal: She warned against “unsustainable environmentalism” leading to deindustrialisation — in line with Trump-era rhetoric, but articulated through European concerns over competitiveness and social costs.

Between the lines: Meloni’s balancing act is not easy. Most EU leaders avoid overtly syncing with Donald Trump’s agenda, fearing a credibility gap in Brussels.

  • Her formula is to stand firmly in the Western camp while defending national sovereignty and European autonomy. This allows her to speak the language of both Washington and Brussels.
  • The UN stage gave her global visibility to underscore Italy’s ambition to act as a strategic hinge, especially on Africa, food security, and development finance.

The bottom line: Meloni’s speech confirms a political line that is both clear and unusual in today’s Europe: Italy as a transatlantic bridge, aligned with the US yet rooted in EU legitimacy. It’s a delicate path that gives her leverage that few others in Europe currently enjoy.

Go deeper: read Meloni’s full speech at UNGA.

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