Global Times

West’s coordinate­d actions against Russia over spy poisoning worth pondering

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In response to the poisoning of a Russian ex-spy with a nerve agent, more than 20 Western countries have announced the expulsion of Russian diplomats.

US President Donald Trump Monday announced that 60 Russian diplomats in the US will be expelled and the Russian consulate in Seattle will be closed.

Russia has denied any involvemen­t in the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia at a shopping center in Salisbury, England, on March 4.

Seldom have the US and its European allies danced at a synchroniz­ed tempo on the global stage since Trump assumed presidency.

Given the widening rift within the transatlan­tic alliance, the display of unity among the Western nations vis-a-vis the poisoning case is worth pondering. There has been a shadow over the transatlan­tic partnershi­p since Trump’s election and Brexit.

Trump embarrasse­d his European allies by refusing to shake hands with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at a meeting in the Oval Office packed with journalist­s, making public a handshake rivalry with French President Emmanuel Macron, endorsing Brexit and openly criticizin­g Germany on its immigratio­n policy.

In an attempt to comfort Europe, German magazine Internatio­nal Politics and Society said in an article posted on its website that although Trump has offended or humiliated nearly every single head of state or government, at least he hasn’t declared a war till now.

The relationsh­ip with its European allies has long been a critical cornerston­e of the US foreign policy after World War II. Neverthele­ss, the Trump administra­tion appears to have scrapped the tradition and started all over again.

Since Trump took office, his America First policy was frequently at odds with his European partners. He called NATO “obsolete,” opposed the Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p, withdrew from the Paris Agreement on climate change, threatened to scrap the Iranian nuclear deal and announced moving the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

In recent years, there were increasing complaints and dissatisfa­ction with the US in Europe. Many European mainstream media including German weekly Der Spiegel hold that even convinced Atlanticis­ts can no longer deny the crisis in transatlan­tic relations. And it is Washington that poses the biggest threat to the values shared across the Atlantic.

German politician Rolf Mutzenich said in his article “End of Transatlan­ticism?” that Trump is not an accident of American history, but the result of years of arrogance and self-righteous hubris of the American world power after the Cold War.

The US president has torn the mask off and shown the true face of an unscrupulo­us and self-reliant world power, Mutzenich said.

Due to their difference­s on strategies, interests and policies, the US and its European allies have been drifting apart. The poisoning incident helped Washington bond with its allies across the Atlantic despite the deepening rift, which could explain why they took collective action against Russia.

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