Khaleej Times

Merkel-Trump meeting seen as a clash of style, substance

- Reuters

berlin — She is controlled and cautious, a physicist from East Germany who takes her time making decisions and has never relished the attention that comes from being Europe’s most powerful leader.

He is a wealthy real estate magnate from New York who shoots from the hip and enjoys the spotlight.

It is hard to imagine two leaders more different, in style or substance, than Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, and Donald Trump, the new president of the United States.

For months, they have been engaged in an uneasy long-distance skirmish over policy and values.

On Tuesday, they meet for the first time — a high-stakes encounter that will be watched by government­s around the world for clues about the future of the transatlan­tic alliance, a partnershi­p that has helped shape the global order since World War Two but which Trump is threatenin­g to upend.

“Do I think they are going to become good friends? Probably not. They are very different personalit­ies,” said Charles Kupchan, who advised Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama on European policy as a member of the National Security Council.

“But I do think they have a strong interest, both politicall­y and strategica­lly,

do I think they are going to become good friends? Probably not. They are very different personalit­ies Charles Kupchan, Ex-adviser to Obama

in learning how to work together. It is arguably the most important meeting with a foreign leader of Trump’s presidency.”

German officials say the detailorie­nted Merkel, 62, has been preparing assiduousl­y for her trip to Washington.

She has watched Trump’s speeches and poured over his interviews, including a lengthy Q&A with Playboy magazine from 1990 in which he floats many of the controvers­ial ideas he is now trying to implement as president, they say.

Members of her entourage have also analysed Trump’s encounters with other leaders — including Britain’s Theresa May, Japan’s Shinzo Abe and Canada’s Justin Trudeau — and have had exchanges with some of their counterpar­ts on how to handle the unpredicta­ble former reality-TV star, the officials added.

“We have to be prepared for the fact that he does not like to listen for long, that he prefers clear positions and does not want to delve into details,” said one senior Gerwashing­ton man official. On both economic and foreign policy, the divide between the two leaders appears vast. Trump, 70, has called Merkel’s decision to allow hundreds of thousands of refugees into Germany a “catastroph­ic mistake”. He has threatened to impose tariffs on German carmakers that import into the US market. And he has criticised Berlin for not spending more on defence. —

 ?? AFP ?? Protestors demonstrat­e against Breitbart News and what the describe as the media company’s propaganda for the Trump administra­tion, outside the Breitbart office in the Brentwood area of Los Angeles, California. —
AFP Protestors demonstrat­e against Breitbart News and what the describe as the media company’s propaganda for the Trump administra­tion, outside the Breitbart office in the Brentwood area of Los Angeles, California. —

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