Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Merkel suggests Europe can’t rely on U.S.

She urges Union to take control of own destiny

- GREG TOPPO

German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Sunday that Europeans “must take our fate into our own hands,” suggesting that President Trump’s visit last week — and his contentiou­s relations with the European Union and NATO — show that the days when Europe could rely on others were “over to a certain extent.”

Speaking at a campaign rally in a packed Bavarian beer hall, Merkel told the crowd, “This is what I have experience­d in the last few days,” The Washington Post reported.

Merkel never mentioned Trump by name, but the remarks seemed a clear response to the president’s trip, which included a fraught Group of Seven summit.

Trump has refused to endorse the Paris climate agreement, and has said he wants a 35% import tax on BMWs assembled in Mexico to encourage manufactur­ers to move to the United States.

On Thursday, he told EU Commission­er Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council president Donald Tusk, “The Germans are bad, very bad,” German news magazine Der Spiegel reported. “Look at the millions of cars they’re selling in the U.S. Terrible,” he reportedly said. “We will stop this.”

Last March, Merkel reminded Trump that the U.S. can’t negotiate a deal with Germany alone — it must deal with the entire EU, since Germany is a member state.

She told him at the time that trade agreements with the U.S. have “not always been all that popular in Germany either.”

Also on Thursday, in a speech at the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on headquarte­rs in Brussels, Trump failed to explicitly endorse the military alliance’s commitment to collective defense, even as he called on other leaders to spend more money on security.

Trump has never formally endorsed the NATO treaty’s Article 5 commitment that an attack on one member country will be treated as an attack on all, making his silence on the subject in his address especially striking.

The president who has touted an “America First” foreign policy did, however, refer more generally to “the commitment­s that bind us together as one” and promised to “never forsake the friends who stood by our side.”

After the speech, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said it should have been assumed that Trump backed Article 5, given the fact he was speaking at the dedication of a memorial to it. “We’re not playing cutesy with this. He’s fully committed,” Spicer told reporters. “There’s 100% commitment to Article 5.”

After returning to the U.S., Trump on Sunday tweeted that the nine-day trip “was a great success for America. Hard work but big results!”

Merkel apparently thought differentl­y. Campaignin­g for a fourth term in elections that take place in September, she also referenced Britain’s recent decision to leave the European Union, telling a crowd in Munich, “The times in which we could rely fully on others, they are somewhat over,” The New York Times reported.

Trump critic Bill Kristol, editor of the conservati­ve Weekly Standard magazine, tweeted: “Merkel’s comments today are a reminder that Trump’s failures are, while he’s president, also America’s failure, and damage America.”

Former George W. Bush speechwrit­er David Frum, also a frequent Trump critic, was more blunt. He called the trip “a catastroph­e for U.S.Europe Relations” and tweeted: “Since 1945, the supreme strategic goal in Europe of the USSR and then Russia was the severing of the USGerman alliance. Trump delivered.”

Merkel said Europe must stand up for its own interests and be more selfrelian­t on defense, among other issues.

“We have to know that we must fight for our future on our own, for our destiny as Europeans.”

The White House has said Trump was getting wide-ranging advice on what to do about the Paris climate pact, which requires nearly 200 nations to commit to voluntary plans to reduce carbon emissions.

Some Trump aides want the U.S. to withdraw, saying the accord’s commitment­s to reduce greenhouse gases in future years will damage the U.S. energy industry.

Others say the U.S. should stay in the accord in order to shape the debate over climate change and avoid diplomatic problems associated by withdrawal.

Merkel said the climate discussion during the summit “was very difficult, not to say unsatisfac­tory.

There’s a situation where it’s six — if you count the European Union, seven — against one,” The Times reported.

 ?? EUROPEAN PRESS AGENCY ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel toasts supporters during an election campaign event on Sunday. Without naming him, Merkel appeared to be critical of President Donald Trump’s agenda at the Group of Seven summit meetings last week.
EUROPEAN PRESS AGENCY German Chancellor Angela Merkel toasts supporters during an election campaign event on Sunday. Without naming him, Merkel appeared to be critical of President Donald Trump’s agenda at the Group of Seven summit meetings last week.

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