The Standard (St. Catharines)

Trump the ‘nationalis­t’ stood apart in Paris

European leaders urge more internatio­nal co-operation as Macron calls nationalis­m a ‘betrayal of patriotism’

- DARLENE SUPERVILLE AND JILL COLVIN

PARIS — For U.S. President Donald Trump in Paris, America First meant largely America alone.

At a weekend commemorat­ion of the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War, the president who proudly declares himself a “nationalis­t” stood apart, even on a continent where his brand of populism is on the rise.

He began his visit with a tweet slamming the French president’s call for a European defence force, arrived at events alone and spent much of his trip out of sight in the American ambassador­s’ residence in central Paris. On Sunday, he listened as he was lectured on the dangers of nationalis­t isolation, and then he headed home just as the inaugural Paris Peace Summit was getting underway.

The visit made clear that, nearly two years after taking office, Trump has dramatical­ly upended decades of American foreign policy posture, shaking allies.

That includes French President Emmanuel Macron, who on Sunday warned that the “ancient demons” that caused the

First World War and millions of deaths were once again making headway.

Macron, who has been urging a re-embrace of multinatio­nal organizati­ons and co-operation that have been shunned by Trump, delivered a barely-veiled rebuke of Trumpism at the weekend’s centrepiec­e event: A gathering of dozens of leaders at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the base of the Arc de Triomphe to mark the passage of a century since the guns fell silent in a global war that killed millions. Bells tolled across Europe’s Western Front and fighter jets passed overhead to mark the exact moment the devastatin­g war came to a close.

With Trump and other leaders looking on, Macron took on the rising tide of populism in the United States and Europe and urged leaders not to turn their backs by turning inward.

“Patriotism is the exact opposite of nationalis­m: Nationalis­m is a betrayal of patriotism,” Macron said, adding that, when nations put their interests first and decide “who cares about the others” they “erase the most precious thing a nation can have ... Its moral values.”

After Trump was gone, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who recently announced that she will not be seeking reelection, made an impassione­d plea for global co-operation at the peace forum, saying the First World War had “made clear what disastrous consequenc­es a lack of compromise in politics and diplomacy can have.”

Trump, who has made clear that he has limited patience for broad, multilater­al agreements, sat mostly stone-faced as he listened to Macron, who sees himself as Europe’s foil to the rising nationalis­t sentiment, which has taken hold in Hungary and Poland among other countries.

Trump did engage with his fellow leaders, attending a group welcome dinner hosted by Macron at the Musée d’Orsay on Saturday night and a lunch on Sunday. He also spent time with Macron on Saturday, when the two stressed their shared desire for more burden-sharing during a quick availabili­ty with reporters.

But Trump was terse during some of his private conversati­ons with world leaders, according to people with direct knowledge of his visit. One of the people described the president as “grumpy.” They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss private conversati­ons.

The symbolism during Trump’s visit couldn’t have been more stark.

Trump was missing from one of the weekend’s most powerful images: A line of world leaders, walking shoulder to-shoulder in a sombre, rain-soaked procession as the bells marking the exact moment that fighting ended — 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918 — finished tolling.

The president and first lady Melania Trump had travelled to the commemorat­ion separately — White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders cited security protocols — from the other dignitarie­s, who had travelled together by bus from the Élysée Palace.

As Trump’s motorcade was making its solo trip down the grand Champs-Élysées, which was closed to traffic, at least one topless woman breached tight security, running into the street and shouting “fake peace maker” as the cars passed. She had slogans, including the words “Fake” and “Peace,” written on her chest.

Police tackled the woman and the motorcade continued uninterrup­ted. The feminist activist group Femen later claimed responsibi­lity.

Also travelling on his own was Russian President Vladimir Putin, who shook Trump’s hand, flashed him a thumbs-up sign and patted Trump’s arm as he arrived. Trump responded with a wide smile.

National Security Adviser John Bolton had said at one point that Putin and

Trump would meet in Paris, but they will instead hold a formal sit-down later this month at a world leaders’ summit in Buenos Aires.

A Kremlin official said later that U.S. and Russian officials decided to drop plans for the Paris meeting after French officials objected.

Trump, who ran on an “America First” platform, has jarred European allies with his actions. He has slapped tariffs on the European Union, pulled the U.S. out of the landmark Paris Climate Accord and the Iran nuclear deal and suggested he might be willing to pull the U.S. out of NATO if member counties don’t significan­tly boost their defence spending. Trump’s eagerness to get along with the Russian leader — in spite of Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election and numerous other aggressive moves in recent years — has alarmed those who view Russia as a growing threat.

Trump has also repeatedly branded himself a “nationalis­t,” despite criticism from some that the term has negative connotatio­ns. At a news conference last week, Trump defended his use of the phrase. “You know what the word is? I love our country,” he said, adding: “You have nationalis­ts. You have globalists. I also love the world and I don’t mind helping the world, but we have to straighten out our country first. We have a lot of problems.”

But Trump did not broach the divide as he paid tribute Sunday to U.S. and allied soldiers killed in the First World War during “a horrible, horrible war” that marked America’s emergence as a world power.

The Veterans Day speech came a day after Trump was criticized for failing to visit a different American cemetery about 100 kilometres outside Paris on Saturday because rain grounded the helicopter he had planned to take.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump stands among headstones during a ceremony at Suresnes American Cemetery. Sunday was the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War.
JACQUELYN MARTIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. President Donald Trump stands among headstones during a ceremony at Suresnes American Cemetery. Sunday was the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War.

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