The current rift in transatlantic relations seems to be deepening by the day.
The visit of the Austrian chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, to the White House on Wednesday (20 February) - the first such summit in 13 years - only underlined this even further.
And this is despite the fact that Trump and Kurz share a common conservative agenda and a number of foreign policy goals.
They share a similar stance on migration.
Trump just declared a "national emergency" to gain access to billions of dollars to pay for a border wall with Mexico.
Meanwhile, Kurz is known in Europe for having closed the so-called 'Balkan route' to refugees trying to reach Austria and Germany via south-eastern Europe.
When Austria held the six-month rotating presidency of the European Union in the second half of 2018, Kurz also pushed for strengthening the EU's external borders and for increasing the number of border guards of the EU border agency.
Just like the US, Austria also withdrew from the UN migration pact, causing much dismay in many other European capitals.