Los Angeles Times

Trump team seeks to calm global nerves

A summit in Germany offers a chance for the administra­tion to assuage the worries of European leaders.

- By W.J. Hennigan and Tracy Wilkinson

MUNICH, Germany — Led by Vice President Mike Pence, the Trump administra­tion is seeking to calm tensions among anxious allies at a high-level security summit in Germany after weeks of puzzling statements from Washington that threatened to reorder decades of U.S. foreign policy.

The annual Munich Security Conference represents a major opportunit­y for the fledgling administra­tion to clarify U.S. foreign policy and security priorities to heads of state, foreign ministers and others worried about Trump’s policy shifts toward Europe, Russia, China and the Middle East.

Although Defense Secretary James Mattis, who is here with Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly and several members of Congress, gave opening remarks on Friday, it will fall to Pence to allay concerns about Trump’s freewheeli­ng style and turbulent White House when he addresses the summit on Saturday.

Pence also will sit down with European leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who have yet to meet senior members of a new administra­tion that has been distracted by infighting and leaks, including details of Trump’s phone quarrels with the leaders of Mexico and Australia.

“The first theme is reassuranc­e,” said a senior White House foreign policy advisor. “We’re there to reassure Europe’s role both as our indispensa­ble partner and the commitment to our allies.”

Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to the United States who now runs the Munich summit, said Pence’s appearance was highly anticipate­d.

“We’re all hoping the American vice president will give a statement on ... all of these questions that we in the past weeks have wondered: ‘What does America under Trump really want?’ ”

The dismay of European leaders who have converged here is palpable, particular­ly from the Baltic states. They see an increasing­ly aggres-

sive Russia on their borders, and are fearful of Trump’s oft-stated admiration for Russian President Vladimir Putin two years after his troops seized Crimea and began backing armed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

“His uncritical embrace of Putin, who most European Allies view as a thug who poses a grave danger to European security, is deeply disconcert­ing,” said Ivo H. Daalder, former U.S. ambassador to NATO and current president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. “Alliances are based on trust, and that trust has been severely tested.”

More than anything, European leaders are hoping for firm answers from a White House that has challenged the network of multinatio­nal alliances, including NATO, that has kept most of the continent at peace since World War II.

Without naming Trump, German Defense Minister Ursula von der Leyen criticized the president’s support of Britain’s decision to leave the European Union as well as his criticism of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on.

“Our American friends know well that your tone on Europe and NATO has a direct impact on the cohesion of our continent,” Von der Leyen said. “A stable European Union is also in America’s interest, as is a strong, unified, determined NATO.”

Leaders also are confused by the Trump administra­tion’s whiplash foreign policy declaratio­ns.

Weeks after calling the NATO military alliance “obsolete,” for example, Trump this month vowed “strong support” for the 28-nation military alliance, a position Mattis echoed at a meeting of NATO defense ministers this week in Brussels.

And weeks after taking a call from the leader of Taiwan and publicly questionin­g the “one China” policy, a bedrock of Sino-U.S. relations, Trump did an aboutface in a call with the president of China and publicly affirmed the policy.

This week, Trump appeared to reject decades of U.S. diplomacy in the Middle East by saying the United States would no longer insist on creation of two states for two peoples to resolve the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict. The next day, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations clarified that Trump was “absolutely” committed to the two-state policy.

Beyond that, foreign leaders are concerned about the turmoil in Trump’s national security team.

Trump this week dismissed his national security advisor, Michael Flynn, for being untruthful about his contacts with Russia’s ambassador, and has struggled to find a replacemen­t. Highlevel staffing gaps also have hampered operations at the State Department and other federal agencies.

At a rambling news conference Thursday, Trump blamed concerns on Capitol Hill about alleged contacts between members of his campaign and Russian authoritie­s during last year’s presidenti­al race for thwarting his hopes of thawing relations with Moscow.

Trump argued that he would benefit politicall­y if he got much tougher on Russia, mentioning reports of a Russian spy ship that has sailed up the East Coast in recent days. The ship was in internatio­nal waters and its passage was routine, Coast Guard officials said.

“The greatest thing I could do is shoot that ship that’s 30 miles offshore right out of the water,” Trump said.

Most of Europe now views Trump with “considered wariness, prompting cautious engagement,” said Joe Devanny, a research fellow with the Internatio­nal Center for Security Analysis at King’s College London.

In his remarks Friday, Mattis sought to reassure Europeans of Trump’s adherence to traditiona­l foreign policy goals, including the threats posed by Russia and terrorist groups.

“We all see our community of nations under threat on multiple fronts as the arc of instabilit­y builds on NATO’s periphery and beyond,” Mattis said. “The transatlan­tic bond remains our strongest bulwark against instabilit­y and violence.”

Whether comments like those will be sufficient to calm European nerves isn’t clear.

“To a certain extent, this is mission impossible,” said Derek Chollet, executive vice president at the German Marshall Fund, a transatlan­tic think tank. “People will be very happy to hear the reassuring words, but they are still deeply worried. The question is, ‘Do any of these people speak for Trump?’ ”

In a separate trip to Germany, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met in Bonn with the foreign ministers of the G-20, the world’s top 20 economies. On Friday, the group discussed the civil war in Syria, and participan­ts said they largely endorsed a continuati­on of Obama administra­tion efforts to seek a political solution under a U.N. framework.

After a bilateral session with Angelino Alfano, Italy’s foreign minister, Tillerson briefly entertaine­d reporters’ questions.

Asked what he had accomplish­ed in his debut trip as America’s top diplomat, Tillerson was characteri­stically terse. “Met a lot of people, made a lot of new friends. It was a full schedule,” he said.

He said he had many messages to deliver to Trump. Asked to describe one, he replied, “Not until I share it with him.”

 ?? Munich Security Conference 2017 ?? DEFENSE Secretary James Mattis speaks at the conference in praise of NATO. President Trump’s criticism of the alliance has caused alarm in Europe.
Munich Security Conference 2017 DEFENSE Secretary James Mattis speaks at the conference in praise of NATO. President Trump’s criticism of the alliance has caused alarm in Europe.

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