The Citizen (Gauteng)

US, Europe in bitter spat

WARNING: NATO CHIEF CONCERNED OVER SERIOUS DISAGREEME­NTS FORMING IN THE ALLIANCE

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Eyes on Trump for claiming European countries aren’t pulling their weight.

Brussels

North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) chief Jens Stoltenber­g said yesterday he was battling to stop the increasing­ly bitter row between Europe and the US spilling over into the alliance, warning of “serious disagreeme­nts” among member countries.

European countries are at loggerhead­s with Washington over punishing new US tariffs on steel and aluminium as well as President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal and Paris climate accord.

Nato defence ministers will meet in Brussels tomorrow to approve plans to beef up the alliance’s ability to mobilise forces quickly in the event of a crisis, as concern about the threat from Russia shows no sign of abating.

They will also sign off on two new command centres – one to protect Atlantic shipping lanes, based in Norfolk, Virginia, and another to coordinate troop movements around Europe.

But the meeting, just five weeks out from a full summit of Nato leaders, looks set to be overshadow­ed by the spat between European countries and the US.

“There are now serious disagreeme­nts with Nato allies on serious issues,” Stoltenber­g told reporters, saying he was working hard to minimise the fallout for the alliance.

“As long as they’re not solved, I have to be focused on how to reduce (and) limit the negative consequenc­es for Nato.”

Stoltenber­g insisted the “transatlan­tic bond” remained strong and pointed to the way Nato survived major difference­s among members over the Iraq war in 2003 and the Suez crisis of 1956.

“What we have seen again and again is that we have been able to unite around Nato’s core task, to protect and defend each other despite those difference­s,” he said.

The leaders of all 29 Nato members will meet in Brussels for the summit in July when the focus will be on Trump, who has repeatedly attacked European countries for not pulling their weight in the alliance.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has suffered the worst of Trump’s wrath for its failure to live up to a pledge by all Nato countries to try to spend at least 2% of gross domestic product on defence. –

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