Regina Leader-Post

EUROPE BRACES FOR TRUMP VISIT.

President praises Putin, stokes discord in U.K.

- PHILIP RUCKER, MICHAEL BIRNBAUM AND WILLIAM BOOTH

BRUSSELS • U.S. President Donald Trump signalled he was ready for a transatlan­tic brawl Tuesday as he embarked on a week of internatio­nal diplomacy, taking aim at vulnerable British Prime Minister Theresa May and suggesting that meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin might be easier than talking with Western allies at the NATO summit here.

Leaders converged on Brussels fearful of what the combative U.S. president might say or do to rupture the liberal world order, with some European diplomats privately predicting calamity.

As he departed Washington on Tuesday, Trump stoked the deep divisions in May’s government to undermine the leader of America’s closest historic ally on the eve of the NATO meeting. Asked if May should remain in power, Trump said, “That’s up to the people,” while also compliment­ing her top rival, Boris Johnson.

Some of Europe’s counters to Trump, including May and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, arrive with heavy domestic political baggage of their own, making them vulnerable in negotiatio­ns with Trump as they seek to protect the Western alliance from his impulses on defence spending and trade.

Trump has long prized his instincts for taking advantage of an adversary’s weaknesses, and referred to the “turmoil” confrontin­g May at home in remarks to reporters.

The prime minister faces a rebellion from advocates of a hard break from the European Union, who say she has been waffling, and is in danger of losing control. Johnson, a potential successor to May, resigned Monday as foreign secretary and reportedly savaged her Brexit plan as “a big turd.”

Trump praised him in personal terms: “Boris Johnson is a friend of mine. He’s been very, very nice to me and very supportive. And maybe we’ll speak to him when I get over there. I like Boris Johnson. I’ve always liked him.”

Trump’s seven-day journey begins in Brussels and will take him to England for his first visit there as president, to Scotland for a weekend respite at his private golf course and finally to Helsinki for his tête-à-tête with Putin. Referring to his NATO discussion­s and talks with May and Putin, Trump said, “Frankly Putin may be the easiest of them all.”

European leaders are as concerned about what concession­s he might make to Putin — such as recognizin­g Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine — as they are about the chaos he could create at the NATO summit.

May plans to roll out the red carpet for Trump and first lady Melania Trump at a gala supper Thursday at Blenheim Palace, former prime minister Winston Churchill’s boyhood home, and at a luncheon Friday at Chequers, the prime minister’s country estate. She also secured him an audience with Queen Elizabeth at Windsor Castle.

It was a startling gambit for Trump to risk offending his host by showering Johnson with praise while May faces threats of a revolt — even a no-confidence vote — by her own Conservati­ve party over how she is handling Brexit.

“Trump goes after the weak people. He smells who is weak and who is strong, and he gets on well with the strong ones,” said Robin Niblett, director of the Chatham House, a prominent think-tank in London.

Trump loathes Germany’s trade imbalance with the United States and feels the country is free-riding off the U.S. security umbrella. He also has long criticized Merkel for her 2015 decision to admit more than one million asylum seekers from Syria and elsewhere, warning that they were a proverbial Trojan horse who could destroy Europe’s way of life.

Other sometimes-adversarie­s of Trump will be in Brussels as well, including French President Emmanuel Macron and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, creating the potential to extend disagreeme­nts that upended last month’s Group of Seven leaders summit in Quebec. Trump left that gathering without signing the perfunctor­y joint statement among the leaders that his aides had endorsed, and he proceeded to trash Trudeau as “weak” and “dishonest.”

European Council President Donald Tusk anticipate­d that Trump may have designs on sowing discord, delivering a stinging warning to the visiting president.

“America does not have and will not have a better ally than Europe today,” Tusk said.

“Dear America, appreciate your allies. After all, you don’t have that many.”

As he departed the White House, Trump offered a rebuttal.

“Well, we do have a lot of allies,” he told reporters before boarding Marine One. “But we cannot be taken advantage of. We’re being taken advantage of by the European Union. We lost $151 billion last year on trade. And on top of that, we spend at least 70 per cent for NATO. And, frankly, it helps them a lot more than it helps us. So we’ll see what happens. We have a long, beautiful week.”

DEAR AMERICA, APPRECIATE YOUR ALLIES. AFTER ALL, YOU DON’T HAVE THAT MANY.

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