Iraq War Verhofstadt opposed the
American-led invasion of Iraq. The 2001 Belgian
EU presidency semester was considered cautious on the matter. In 2024, during the
Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip, Verhofstadt called for a "ceasefire now".
Bahraini uprising Verhofstadt condemned the killings of protesters during
Bahrain's pro-democracy
uprising in 2011. He said: "Protestors were killed, tortured and imprisoned. These incidents need to be properly investigated and brought to justice - not swept under the carpet. Until this has happened, I fully agree that the
Formula One Grand Prix should not return to Bahrain."
Catalan independence 's leader
Artur Mas in 2012 In 2017, Verhofstadt opposed the
Catalan independence referendum, but also denounced
Spain's use of violence. Verhofstadt said that "referendum lacked basic democratic legitimacy". According to Verhofstadt, the former Catalan president
Carles Puigdemont "left Catalonia in chaos and devastation".
Russia In April 2015, Verhofstadt criticized Greek prime minister
Alexis Tsipras over his meeting with Russian president
Vladimir Putin in the wake of the
Russo-Ukrainian War and
difficult negotiations between the
EU/
ECB/
IMF and Tsipras's recently elected
Syriza-led government. Via
Twitter according to the New York
Times, Verhofstadt said Tsipras "should stop trying to play Putin against the EU" and that Tsipras "should play according to the common rules and conduct serious reforms". In May 2015, news media reported that Verhofstadt was included in a Russian blacklist of prominent people from the EU who are not allowed to enter the country. In June 2018, Verhofstadt said there was a "circle of evil around our continent", citing
Russia under Putin, Turkey under
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the United States under
Donald Trump. Verhofstadt added: "But our problem runs deeper than that, deeper than only foreign policy or external security. Europe has a
fifth column in its ranks. ... I call them the cheerleaders of Putin: Le Pen, Wilders, Farage. ... Together with government leaders like
Orbán,
Kaczyński,
Salvini: these people have only one goal and that is to destroy Europe, to kill our liberal democracy."
Myanmar On 8 September 2017, Verhofstaft branded
Myanmar leader
Aung San Suu Kyi "a disgrace" following her controversial comments about the
Rohingya genocide in Myanmar.
Turkey In November 2016, Verhofstadt said: "There is broad, broad majority in the house to say you have to freeze accessions talks for the moment and put a number of conditions to restart them once Turkey is compliant." In May 2017, he accused Turkish president
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of cynicism for advocating freedom of speech while journalists are imprisoned in Turkey.
Migration In August 2015, Verhofstadt called for a reform of the EU's asylum and migration system, in reaction to the
European migrant crisis. He also criticised UK prime minister
David Cameron and French president
François Hollande for opposing the European Commission's proposal to distribute asylum requests for migrants over all countries of the EU. He also called on governments of France, the UK, and Hungary to stop building up walls and border security measures, and to shift their effort on humanitarian assistance. This humanitarian assistance includes asking the dysfunctional countries that source migrants to address their own dysfunction.
European federalism Following the results of 2005 European Constitution referendum in
France and
The Netherlands, Verhofstadt released his book
Verenigde Staten van Europa (
United States of Europe), calling for a
federal Europe. Written in Dutch, the book argues (based on the results of a
Eurobarometer questionnaire) that the average European citizen wants "more Europe". In September 2019, Verhofstadt gave a speech at the conference of the
Liberal Democrats in
Bournemouth, saying that "the world of tomorrow is not a world order based on nation states or countries. It is a world order that is based on empires.
China, is not a nation, it's a civilisation.
India is not a nation. The US is also an empire, more than a nation. And then finally the
Russian Federation. The world of tomorrow is a world of empires in which we Europeans, and you British, can only defend your interests, your way of life, by doing it together, in a European framework and in the EU."
Brexit In January 2013, three years before the
2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, Verhofstadt said that Brexit was "stupidity for a country with 53 percent of its exports going to the Continent and to the rest of Europe. It's even so stupid that Britain's best friends, the United States, don't understand it all." In February 2016, in the run-up to the Brexit referendum, Verhofstadt said "The only winners from a
Brexit would be
Nigel Farage and
Vladimir Putin; who would relish a divided Europe." In July 2016, Verhofstadt said "Politically, the UK is already on its way to becoming an adversary, rather than a trusted partner, of the EU... Theresa May actually opposed Brexit, yet her anti-European hostility differs only in degree, not in kind, from that of pro-Brexit politicians… who rejoice at the possibility of additional exit referenda across the EU." In a
Twitter post on 13 June 2018, Verhofstadt accused
Nigel Farage of using "
Kremlin money and claimed
Aaron Banks "colluded with the Russians to deliver Brexit". Lawyers, on behalf of Banks, issued Verhofstadt with a legal letter and said the allegations "are false". In February 2019, Verhofstadt said that Brexit leaders such as
Boris Johnson and
Jacob Rees-Mogg would suffer a similar fate to the leaders of the
French Revolution and "end up on the guillotine". In May 2019, Verhofstadt made public a private joke between him and the UK's chief negotiator,
Olly Robbins, in which Robbins "joked that he would want EU citizenship after Brexit". On 10 May 2019, Verhofstadt joined anti-Brexit supporters in London. He said "We have to stop nationalism and populism the fastest as possible because otherwise, it could be the end of a fantastic project". On 25 July 2019, Verhofstadt branded UK prime minister Johnson's vow to take the UK out of the EU on 31 October as "irresponsible" due to the possibility of a
no-deal Brexit. In September 2019, Verhofstadt attacked the words used by UK prime minister Johnson during the Brexit process, calling it "the language of Europe's dark past". In 2023, Verhofstadt re-iterated his criticisms of Brexit, stating that it paved the path for the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. According to Verhofstadt, Putin would have been more wary of invading if there was a more united Europe, especially on defence matters. ==Honours and awards==