Abcarian: I just got back from Europe. Anti-American sentiment is on the rise
5 min Click here to listen to this article
Share via Close extra sharing options Email Facebook X LinkedIn Threads Reddit WhatsApp Copy Link URL Copied! Print
Copy Link URL Copied!
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.
It was midday just before Easter in Paris. My niece and I walked past the city’s famous opera house, where tourists were relaxing on the wide steps. French soldiers armed with assault rifles strolled around, a comforting sight given the warnings about Iran-backed sleeper cells and potential retaliatory attacks. A busker with a guitar and a microphone entertained the crowd with a Coldplay cover.
Between songs, he asked, “Anyone here speak English?” Unbelievably, not a single hand went up.
The busker shrugged, turned both thumbs down in the universal gesture of disapproval, and said, “America, eh?” I felt him.
A couple of days after I got home, I saw a social media post that reminded me of that moment. “Honestly,” wrote @_thatambitiousgirl, “I don’t know how anyone could even feel comfortable traveling as an American outside of the U.S. right now.”
Anti-American sentiment is on the rise, and it sucks being from a country whose presidents do things like threaten to end a “whole civilization,” invade Middle Eastern countries based on lies about weapons of mass destruction, or insert themselves into pointless conflicts in faraway lands. In college, I had friends who sewed Canadian flags onto their backpacks because they didn’t want to be associated with America’s misadventures in Southeast Asia.
Polls show that half of Europeans view President Trump, who has threatened to withdraw from NATO, as an enemy rather than an ally. He has managed the neat trick of telling our allies they are useless while castigating them for not rushing to help with his poorly planned war on Iran. “This is not our war,” the German defense minister said pointedly last month. “We have not started it.”
Quite simply, with the assent of the Republican Party, Trump is taking a wrecking ball to the world order as we’ve known it in our lifetimes, while also managing to make life harder for Americans at home.
“We’re worse off in every way, and officially a global pariah,” said the New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie on Facebook this week. “Awesome. Love that.”
Anyway, I was glad to see that someone I know, the novelist Erin Zhurkin, responded thoughtfully to @_that ambitiousgirl’s Instagram post.
“Been an American abroad for 20 years now,” wrote Zhurkin, whose Russian-born American husband is an executive with Renault. “Six countries so far. People are in general curious and grateful that I can see my country from all sides….I try to represent the heart of the US, which I believe is about being open to all people and finding commonalities rather than differences.”
This, truly, is the heart of the matter.
In the fall of 1967, my family moved from Northridge to France, where my father had a year-long Fulbright teaching scholarship at the University of Pau. Before we got on the airplane, my mother sat the four of her rambunctious kids down.
“It’s very important that you not be ‘Ugly Americans,’ ” she told us. We were too young to have read the classic 1958 novel she was referring to, but we understood that we were to be curious and respectful and maybe not yell, as we unfortunately did, “Yuck, this is NOT a hot dog,” during our first meal in Paris.
One winter evening in Pau, my parents took us to an anti-war demonstration, as they had done many times in Los Angeles. The locals we marched with were chanting something we couldn’t quite make out. It sounded to our American ears like “Yohn-kee go ohm.” We figured it out pretty quickly, and frankly, it was unsettling.
Zhurkin had a similar experience in Moscow, in the early 1990s, at a kiosk near Red Square. “An older Russian lady looked at me, and in a thick Russian accent said, ‘Yankee, go home,’ ” Zhurkin told me by phone from Ljubljana, Slovenia, where she and her family had moved in September from Seoul. “It opened up this whole feeling inside of me that there is something about my country that may not be as wonderful as it seems. It was a huge, perspective-breaking moment for me.”
Years later, Zhurkin was living in Paris. Trump had just been elected to his first term.
“I could not get into a taxi without someone asking me why I would let this happen, as if it was all me,” Zhurkin said. “They’d say, ‘I can’t believe you Americans are so stupide.’ I was like, ‘Look, I didn’t vote for him.’” Still, she said, “I feel like I am apologizing all the time.”
By the time Joe Biden was elected in 2020, Zhurkin said, her family had moved to Ireland, where the vibe was much more “Thank God you guys got your act together.”
Maybe in the not-too-distant future, we will again. And then we can start to put this long national nightmare behind us.
Bluesky: @rabcarianThreads: @rabcarian
Voices Trump is burning every bridge America had left April 7, 2026
Trump is burning every bridge America had left
Voices Granderson: NATO has stepped up. So why would the U.S. now step out? April 3, 2026
Granderson: NATO has stepped up. So why would the U.S. now step out?
Voices Contributor: U.S. attack on Iran echoes Russia’s invasion of Ukraine March 4, 2026
Contributor: U.S. attack on Iran echoes Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
L.A. Times Insights delivers AI-generated analysis on Voices content to offer all points of view. Insights does not appear on any news articles.
The following AI-generated content is powered by Perplexity. The Los Angeles Times editorial staff does not create or edit the content.
Ideas expressed in the piece
Anti-American sentiment is rising significantly across Europe in response to Trump administration policies and rhetoric, with the article citing how a Paris street performer made a dismissive gesture toward America and public sentiment toward the president has turned sharply negative[1].
Anti-American sentiment is rising significantly across Europe in response to Trump administration policies and rhetoric, with the article citing how a Paris street performer made a dismissive gesture toward America and public sentiment toward the president has turned sharply negative[1].
Trump’s approach to allies has been particularly damaging, as he simultaneously demands their support while telling them they are useless, such as when he criticized European nations for not assisting with military actions in Iran while threatening to withdraw from NATO[1][3].
Trump’s approach to allies has been particularly damaging, as he simultaneously demands their support while telling them they are useless, such as when he criticized European nations for not assisting with military actions in Iran while threatening to withdraw from NATO[1][3].
American travelers abroad increasingly feel ashamed and uncomfortable representing their country due to association with U.S. foreign policy decisions, drawing parallels to historical moments when Americans distanced themselves from perceived American misadventures, such as through the decades-old practice of sewing Canadian flags onto backpacks[1].
American travelers abroad increasingly feel ashamed and uncomfortable representing their country due to association with U.S. foreign policy decisions, drawing parallels to historical moments when Americans distanced themselves from perceived American misadventures, such as through the decades-old practice of sewing Canadian flags onto backpacks[1].
The Trump administration’s actions represent a fundamental breaking of the post-World War II international order that brought stability and prosperity to Europe, and individual Americans must work to counterbalance this by representing American values of openness and respect rather than becoming “Ugly Americans” when traveling[1].
The Trump administration’s actions represent a fundamental breaking of the post-World War II international order that brought stability and prosperity to Europe, and individual Americans must work to counterbalance this by representing American values of openness and respect rather than becoming “Ugly Americans” when traveling[1].
Different views on the topic
Despite rising anti-American political sentiment at the governmental and public level, individual American travelers remain genuinely welcome in Europe and are not treated poorly because of presidential policies, as European citizens distinguish between political leaders and individual people[2].
Despite rising anti-American political sentiment at the governmental and public level, individual American travelers remain genuinely welcome in Europe and are not treated poorly because of presidential policies, as European citizens distinguish between political leaders and individual people[2].
European tour guides and citizens are not uniformly anti-Trump and maintain appreciation for American strength and leadership, with some expressing gratitude that the U.S. is being perceived as strong again and valuing America’s role as a force for good globally[2].
European tour guides and citizens are not uniformly anti-Trump and maintain appreciation for American strength and leadership, with some expressing gratitude that the U.S. is being perceived as strong again and valuing America’s role as a force for good globally[2].
While European officials and politicians publicly criticize Trump policies for domestic political benefit, they continue pursuing pragmatic working relationships with the White House because maintaining the U.S. alliance remains strategically necessary in the near term[1].
While European officials and politicians publicly criticize Trump policies for domestic political benefit, they continue pursuing pragmatic working relationships with the White House because maintaining the U.S. alliance remains strategically necessary in the near term[1].
