The Borneo Post

Pence tells Europe: ‘US will always be your greatest ally’

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MUNICH, Germany: US VicePresid­ent Mike Pence yesterday pledged an ‘unwavering’ commitment to transatlan­tic ties, in an emphatic reassuranc­e to allies including German Chancellor Angela Merkel who pleaded with nations not to go it alone.

Capping a week of whirlwind diplomacy by American officials who have descended on Europe to calm nerves rattled by Donald Trump, Pence underlined the United States’ devotion to its old friends.

“The United States is and will always be your greatest ally. Be assured that President Trump and our people are truly devoted to our transatlan­tic union,” he told European leaders including Merkel at the Munich Security Conference.

“The promise to share the burden of our defence has gone unfulfille­d for too many, for too long and it erodes the very foundation of our alliance,” he warned, stressing that “the time has come to do more”.

At the same time, he did not go further and threaten, as Trump had done, to walk away if the allies failed to pay their way.

The US, he said, will boost defence spending significan­tly, “to defend our nation and our treaty allies from the known threats of today and the unknown threats of

The United States is and will always be your greatest ally. Be assured that President Trump and our people are truly devoted to our transatlan­tic union. — Mike Pence, US Vice-President

tomorrow”.

“We will meet our obligation­s to our people to provide for the common defence, and we’ll continue to do our part to support our allies in Europe and in Nato,” he said.

Trump’s criticism of Nato as ‘obsolete’, his praise for Britain’s decision to leave the European Union as well as his softer approach towards Russia unnerved Washington’s allies.

But over the past week in Europe, key members of his administra­tion have pressed the message that the United States is not retreating into isolation but remains committed to its global role.

At Nato in Brussels on Thursday, Defence Secretary James Mattis said Russia must first ‘prove itself’ and respect internatio­nal law before there can be any improvemen­t in relations strained to breaking point by Moscow’s Ukraine interventi­on and annexation of Crimea.

Mattis said the transatlan­tic bond was “as strong as I’ve ever seen it”, and stressed America remained ‘rock solid’ in support of Article 5 – Nato’s core “one for all, all for one” collective-defence tenet.

Likewise, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was cautious in his dealings with Russia.

Following his first sit-down with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Bonn on Thursday, Tillerson said the US would cooperate with Moscow but only when doing so “will benefit the American people”.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel walks with Pence during the 53rd Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany. — Reuters photo
German Chancellor Angela Merkel walks with Pence during the 53rd Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany. — Reuters photo

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