On the other hand, I do not know the position of the Bitcoin community in this case and do they have countermeasures to contain such a dangerous situation?
I don't know it either. I know that in the past, there has been a hard fork due to an update, which was subsequently resolved with a soft fork. But that type of action requires cooperation by more than 50% of the miners, something that Bitcoin couldn't depend on under a 51% attack.
The Bitcoin community could try to vote to go back to the original fork after a 51% attack, and declare the
attack fork, as we might call it, invalid. And they could choose to distribute the rights to vote according PoS if they are smart.
However, if this is only implemented as a fail safe solution, the attacking miners, with the backing of Ethereum, could keep making reorgs just at the edge of what the community considers normal or malicious activity, thus causing disagreement of whether forks are valid or not.
The only long-lasting solution (that remains decentralized), as far as I can see, would therefore be to fully convert to PoS for the everyday consensus mechanism. But then Bitcoin better make sure that the community is on board with PoS, or else it will create a fork of the blockchain.
Edit:
Let me also just add: Whatever Bitcoin decides to do, they better make a concise and timely decision about it, I think. 'Cause if investors first start to become uneasy and trade their BTC to ETH as a result, it would make the value of Bitcoin drop, which would then make it even easier to afford a 51% attack. As far as I can see, this could create a feedback loop where more and more investors migrate from Bitcoin to Ethereum—where the first ones to do so might gain a lot from it, but where the last ones left behind will have lost a lot of money.