It looks like former President Trump has indeed reignited the tariff strategy:

• On July 12, 2025, Trump announced via letters posted on Truth Social that the U.S. will impose a 30% tariff on all imports from both the European Union and Mexico, effective August 1, 2025 .

• The justification: For the EU, Trump pointed to long-standing trade deficits and “non-reciprocal” trade practices . For Mexico, he cited insufficient action against fentanyl trafficking and other border security concerns .

• This move closely follows similar tariffs announced earlier this month—such as a 35% tariff on Canadian goods and 50% on copper, as part of a broader escalation .

⚔️ Is this the start of a new tariff war?

Yes, very likely. This is a clear escalation of Trump’s “reciprocal tariffs” strategy, which intensified in April (20% on EU goods, 25% under USMCA, etc.) and has already involved Canada, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, and others ().

Reuters characterizes this as part of a widening trade war, with these tariffs hitting “major trading partners… after weeks of negotiations failed to reach a more comprehensive trade deal” . The European Union has threatened “proportionate retaliatory measures” and is scrambling to salvage a trade agreement before the August 1 deadline .

Private sector and investor responses are mixed—markets have remained relatively resilient, but there’s growing concern this aggressive policy could lead to dislocation in global supply chains, inflation, and a possible global slowdown .

🔍 What to keep an eye on

1. Responses from the EU and Mexico

• The EU is working to finalize a trade deal to hold off the tariffs; if talks fail, expect steep retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods .

• Mexico may use exemptions under USMCA, but their overall reaction remains to be seen.

2. Upcoming domestic and global trade moves

• Trump has hinted at potential blanket tariffs on other nations (~20%), continuing expansion of copper duties, and possibly lifting or lowering tariffs if agreements are struck .

3. Market and supply chain effects

• While markets have absorbed some of the previous tariff rounds, analysts warn that this new escalation could impact exports, inflation, and investment ().

✅ So: Is Trump starting a tariff war again?

Absolutely. The 30% tariffs on the EU and Mexico mark a significant escalation—part of an ongoing tariff blitz that began earlier this year. Whether it becomes a full trade war depends on how strongly the EU and Mexico retaliate and whether any deals are reached before August 1.

$TRUMP