Irish Independent

EU’s Tusk asks: ‘With friends like Trump, who needs enemies?’

- Gabriela Baczynska

US President Donald Trump has “rid Europe of all illusions” by quitting the Iran nuclear deal and driving trade disputes, the European Council president said yesterday, underlinin­g the depth of trans-Atlantic discord.

The 28 worried EU leaders were gathering in the Bulgarian capital for discussion­s over dinner yesterday on how to salvage the nuclear deal and European business dealings with Iran from Mr Trump’s sanctions and how to avoid a trade war in an escalating tariff dispute with the United States. Donald Tusk said the EU must be more united than ever before to deal with what he called Mr Trump’s “capricious assertiven­ess”.

“Looking at the latest decisions of President Trump, someone could even think: with friends like that, who needs enemies?” Mr Tusk told a news conference.

“But frankly speaking, Europe should be grateful to President Trump. Because thanks to him we have got rid of all illusions. He has made us realise that if you need a helping hand, you will find one at the end of your arm.”

European leaders are troubled by Mr Trump’s “America first” rhetoric and inconsiste­nt statements on Nato and the EU. Mr Trump’s decisions to pull out of the Paris climate change accord and the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran threaten Europe’s own foreign policy, which was long complement­ary to Washington’s.

“Europe must do everything in its power to protect, in spite of today’s mood, the transatlan­tic bond.

“But at the same time we must be prepared for those scenarios, where we will have to act on our own,” said Mr Tusk, who is a former Polish prime minister.

Mr Trump’s moving of the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem this week has also upset many in Europe, though the EU has failed to condemn the move squarely due to opposition from the Czech Republic and Hungary, who are strongly pro-Israel.

French President Emmanuel Macron has tried to charm Mr Trump but that failed to prevent Washington last week from abandoning the Iran deal, which seeks to curb Tehran’s nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief.

Speaking to lawmakers in Paris yesterday, France’s junior minister for Europe, Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, said the US behaviour meant it was time Europe stood up for itself.

“The extra-territoria­l dimension of US sanctions is unacceptab­le,” he said. “We must develop our economic sovereignt­y now. It’s a moment of truth for Europe.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has strongly backed efforts to develop a collective European approach towards Mr Trump’s unilateral­ism but she told the lower house Bundestag yesterday she remained determined to support trans-Atlantic relations.

 ??  ?? European Council President Donald Tusk. Photo: AFP/Getty
European Council President Donald Tusk. Photo: AFP/Getty

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