The so-called "trade bazooka", officially known as the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI), is a law that allows the European Union to respond to economic blackmail from non-EU countries.
It threatens very severe consequences if they attempt to impose their will on the EU or its members.
Specifically, it targets trade and investment measures by countries who are seen to interfere in the "legitimate, sovereign choices" of the EU or its member states.
This response can include a vast swathe of trade measures such as tariffs, import and export restrictions, curbs on trade in services as well as reduced access to banking and capital markets.
Ultimately, it allows the EU to block access to most of the single market while ignoring existing international treaties.
However, this is the nuclear option.
The real purpose of the bazooka is to bring other countries to the negotiating table. Actually deploying it could cause serious economic damage within the EU itself, so it is seen very much as a last resort.
It is also not a rapid response measure.
Under the current rules, the European Commission can spend up to four months investigating any alleged coercion. Another six months can be spent negotiating with the country concerned and deciding whether there is a case for retaliation.
Then, the EU's member states have up to 10 weeks to authorise any action.
So even if the commission were to pull the trigger now, it could be a year before the bazooka is actually fired.