Khaleej Times

Why Macron and Merkel can’t do without Trump

- Peter Ford

It’s a question that Europe has been posing for more than a year: How do you solve a problem like the Donald? The continent’s heaviest political hitters offered their answers to that question this week, as French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel sought in turn to figure out what makes President Trump tick, and how to head off a looming transatlan­tic rupture. They did so in very different styles: Macron flaunted a “bromance” with Trump during his three-day state visit to Washington, while Merkel displayed her customary restraint on a three-hour working trip. But neither claimed to have had much success on their most pressing common aims — to head off a trade war between the US and Europe and to save the internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran.

“It has been a learning curve, and rather a squiggly one,” for European leaders dealing with the unpredicta­ble president, says James Moran, a former European Union ambassador. “It’s anybody’s guess how best to handle him.”

On the face of it, both this week’s visitors to Washington were the kind of politician­s Trump likes least — globalist supporters of the post-war liberal world order, built on rules forged by multilater­al institutio­ns.

In his public appearance­s with Trump, Macron sidesteppe­d that reputation and chose bonhomie as his strategy. Hugs, hand-holding, and air kisses punctuated the visit in remarkably physical displays of friendship. The two men have clearly struck up a rapport.

One “somewhat hopeful” way of dealing with Trump “is to very strongly connect the personal with the political, to treat him royally” says Jan Techau, senior fellow at the think tank German Marshall Fund of the United States.

But there is more to it than that. Macron was the only European leader who “immediatel­y treated Trump with respect,” points out French historian Nicole Bacharan, inviting him to the French independen­ce day military parade last July 14 and to dinner half way up the Eiffel Tower. “He treated him as a welcome, legitimate US president.”

Other European leaders sometimes seemed pained just being close to Trump. Merkel herself got off to a bad start, lecturing him just after he was elected; she offered her cooperatio­n “based on … common values — democracy, freedom, as well as respect for the rule of law and the dignity of each and every person, regardless of their origin, skin colour, creed, gender, sexual orientatio­n, or political views.”

Macron also appeals to Trump because of what the two men have in common, despite their many difference­s; both are outsiders who won office by challengin­g their nations’ political establishm­ent and both regard themselves as rather special. Macron describes himself as “Jupiterian.”

But again, there is more to it than that. France and the US are close allies in the fight against terrorism; Paris joined Washington in airstrikes against Syria; and France is on track to spend two percent of its GDP on defense by 2024, a NATO target to which Trump has attached great importance.

Germany is nowhere near that goal, and will not meet it, though the government last week announced a new round of military purchases.

Although much has been made in the press about how well Macron and Trump get on, the American president speaks by phone nearly as often to Merkel as he does to his French counterpar­t.

And evidence is scarce that Macron has managed to leverage his personal ties to change Trump’s mind on any major policy. “You can give Trump the honourable treatment he wants, but that doesn’t guarantee you success,” says Techau. “The yardstick for success is whether you can move him on the issues, and we’ve seen precious little of that.”

Trump has come round somewhat on NATO; he no longer dismisses the key transatlan­tic alliance as an outdated irrelevanc­e and the Pentagon has actually increased spending in Europe over the past year.

The US president seems less enamoured of Vladimir Putin than he once was; Washington and Europe are now aligned on Russia, both highly suspicious of Moscow’s intentions. Macron may have convinced Trump to give more thought to his decision to withdraw US troops from Syria.

But on other contentiou­s issues, the US president does not seem to be budging.

Washington is staying out of the Paris climate accord and still planning to open an embassy in Jerusalem. Macron himself left Washington saying

The American president speaks by phone nearly as often to Merkel as he does to his French counterpar­t

he thought it unlikely he had succeeded in convincing Trump to stick with the Iran nuclear deal. And the US is still threatenin­g to impose trade tariffs on European Union exports of steel and aluminum on May 1, possibly sparking a wider trade war among traditiona­l allies.

Macron does not gloss over these transatlan­tic difference­s. His speech to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday was a lucid and impassione­d defense of multilater­al decision-making and free trade — two of Trump’s top bugbears.

“Bravo, Emmanuel Macron!” read the headline above an opinion piece published by Deutsche Welle, the German national broadcaste­r. The article praised Macron’s “vision for the world that can be described as an antidote to Trump’s worldview. Highlighti­ng such an alternativ­e was both highly welcome and very necessary.”

It may be too much to hope that any European leader can change Trump’s mind on important issues, says Ms. Bacharan. But the way that Macron combines “a game of seduction with an insistence that he is not afraid of Trump … keeps the US president in a continuous and open dialogue. And that itself is a success.” —The Christian Science Monitor

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