Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump tests U.S. alliance with Europe

- BY RAF CASERT

BRUSSELS — After President Donald Trump’s raucous first month in office, Europeans have reacted with demonstrat­ions, counter-barbs and sheer angst that a century of trans-Atlantic friendship may be sinking.

“Too much has happened,” European Union leader Donald Tusk said Monday, “for us to pretend that everything is as it used to be.”

The government­s of some traditiona­l allies have gone a step further, uniting with fundraisin­g plans and a special conference to balance the new U.S. administra­tion’s reverse tack from Barack Obama’s presidency on abortion policies.

Beyond Trump’s orders on immigratio­n, few of the administra­tion’s policies have unsettled many European nations as much as his ban on funding for internatio­nal groups that perform abortions or provide informatio­n about abortions to women in developing nations.

Belgian Vice Premier Alexander De Croo was so shocked that words were not enough. He said European nations, fearful that thousands of women and girls will die without family planning informatio­n, already are cooperatin­g to make up as much of the funding gap as possible.

Ten EU nations wrote to the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, telling her that Europe cannot let down women in developing nations, whatever the U.S. policy.

Within five days of Trump’s action, Dutch Foreign Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Minister Lilianne Ploumen said she received thousands of messages from over 150 countries,

with many seeking informatio­n how to donate funds.

Belgium, Denmark and the Netherland­s already have committed $10.5 million each and will host an internatio­nal pledging conference March 2 to help cover the financial hole Trump left.

The doubts about Trump made it a tall order for U.S. Vice President Mike Pence during Monday’s talks with Mogherini and other EU leaders.

Pence said Trump sent him to Europe “to express the strong commitment of the United States to continued

cooperatio­n and partnershi­p with the European Union.”

The Europeans will take some convincing.

With intimidati­ng language and caustic one-liners, Trump has called NATO, the old military bond between

Europe and North America, “obsolete,” described Britain’s decision to leave the EU “a tremendous asset” and suggested the EU itself could soon well disintegra­te.

Pence sought to assuage European allies who are constantly wondering what Trump’s next quip or Twitter bomb will bring.

“Too many new, and sometimes surprising, opinions have been voiced,” Tusk told reporters, with Pence standing by his side.

On Saturday, Trump alluded to past terror attacks in the EU and said: “Look what’s happening last night in Sweden.” The president’s comment left Swedes confused since nothing remotely linked to extremist action had troubled the country on Friday night.

“Sweden? Terror attack? What has he been smoking? Questions abound,” former Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt tweeted.

In Munich last week, EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker described the United States in terms of “our American friends, if they should and want to remain our friends.” And Tusk had put the United States in a “threat” category two weeks ago, insisting that Trump is contributi­ng to the “highly unpredicta­ble” outlook.

 ??  ?? United States Vice President Mike Pence, left, and EU Council President Donald Tusk pose for photograph­ers as Pence arrives at the European Council building Monday in Brussels, Belgium. Pence was on a one-day trip to Brussels to meet with EU and NATO...
United States Vice President Mike Pence, left, and EU Council President Donald Tusk pose for photograph­ers as Pence arrives at the European Council building Monday in Brussels, Belgium. Pence was on a one-day trip to Brussels to meet with EU and NATO...

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