Donald Trump has pulled the plug on a $1.8 billion fund aimed at preventing foreign interference. The so-called ‘Anti-Weaponisation’ programme was a rare bipartisan effort. Now it's gone. And the message from Washington is clear: Europe, you're on your own.
This is not some peripheral initiative. The fund was designed to counter disinformation, shore up election security, and protect democratic institutions from hostile states. Russia, China, Iran – they were all in the crosshairs. But Trump, in his ongoing war against the ‘deep state’ and anything touched by his political rivals, has decided to starve it. The money will be redirected, sources say, to border enforcement and veteran services. Popular causes. Smart politics. But a catastrophic signal to allies.
Inside the Conservative Party, the reaction is a mix of alarm and grudging acceptance. ‘We knew this was coming,’ a senior backbencher told me. ‘But the scale is shocking. The Americans have effectively walked away from the information battlefield. Now it falls to us.’ The question is: can the UK afford to pick up the tab?
The Prime Minister’s team is scrambling. Downing Street sources confirm that emergency talks are underway with the Five Eyes partners. But there is a recognition that this is more than a funding gap. It is a strategic pivot. The US is no longer willing to play global policeman, even in the cyber and information domains. That role now defaults to London. But our own coffers are not exactly overflowing. The NHS is creaking. Defence spending is stuck at 2% of GDP. And the idea of finding an extra $1.8 billion for a war of narratives seems almost fanciful.
Yet the threat is real. The UK’s own elections are vulnerable. The 2019 contest saw significant disinformation campaigns. And with a general election looming, the absence of American-backed countermeasures is deeply concerning. Labour is already circling. ‘The government must explain how it will protect our democracy,’ a shadow cabinet source said. ‘We cannot rely on American goodwill. We need our own robust defences.’
The timing could not be worse. The UK is currently negotiating a new security pact with the EU. The very thing that the fund was supposed to address – foreign interference – is now a bargaining chip. Some in Whitehall see an opportunity: leverage Britain’s unique intelligence capabilities to secure a better deal. Others fear it is a sign of weakness. ‘We are being left to hold the line alone,’ a former national security adviser told me. ‘The Americans have made their choice. We must make ours.’
The Prime Minister is due to make a statement later today. Expect tough talk about the UK's resolve. But behind the scenes, the mood is grim. This is not just about $1.8 billion. It is about the unraveling of the post-war security order. And Britain, for all its bluster, is not ready to be the sole guardian of the West’s digital ramparts.












