Houston Chronicle

Trump-Merkel meeting is driven more by duty for both leaders

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BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s one-day visit to Washington on Friday includes meetings at the White House and a news conference alongside President Donald Trump, but it is a businessli­ke affair that seems more duty than pleasure for both leaders.

Merkel arrives with deadlines looming on two crucial issues. Trump has made May 12 his cutoff for deciding whether to pull the United States out of the Iran nuclear accord. Meanwhile, a European exemption from Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs expires Tuesday.

Yet there is little sign Merkel can get Trump to back down from decisions he sees as part of his populist promise to help American workers and secure better internatio­nal deals.

And for Trump, Germany’s pointed refusal to join the allied air assault on Syria this month is the latest on a list of grievances that include what he calls grossly unfair treatment of U.S. automakers.

“I don’t think we should raise the bar of expectatio­ns too high,” said Peter Beyer, coordinato­r of trans-Atlantic relations for Merkel’s conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union.

Merkel will not get the kind of flourishes accorded to French President Emmanuel Macron’s state visit this week, and there will be no golf in the Florida sunshine.

Trump has one welcome gift for Merkel: confirmati­on Thursday of a U.S. ambassador to Germany after months of delay.

Ric Grenell was nominated last year for a post considered crucial to U.S. diplomacy.

Although Trump blamed the long vacancy on political gamesmansh­ip by Democrats, many in Germany and elsewhere saw it as a sign Trump had discounted the U.S. relationsh­ip with Europe’s most populous country.

Merkel and Trump have scant personal chemistry and talk less frequently than any U.S. and German leaders in recent memory. Until a call in March, the two leaders went an extraordin­ary five months without direct communicat­ion.

Trump’s approval ratings in Germany are abysmal. A recent survey showed just 11 percent of Germans have confidence in the U.S. president.

When Barack Obama left office, the figure was above 80.

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