USA TODAY International Edition

Trump blasts Germany as ‘captive to Russia’

NATO summit begins on tense note

- Gregory Korte

BRUSSELS – President Donald Trump unleashed his harshest broadside yet against a European ally on Wednesday, accusing Germany of being “totally controlled by Russia” and of not meeting its obligation­s to the NATO alliance.

“Germany, as far I’m concerned, is captive to Russia,” Trump said.

Trump’s extraordin­ary rhetoric signaled that he would continue his aggressive, America-first attitude toward the United States’ closest allies – even as he himself prepares to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin next week in an effort to improve U.S.Russian relations.

Speaking to reporters after Trump’s remarks, German Chancellor Angela Merkel shot back that she would not be lectured about Russian control of Germany, having grown up in the Sovietdomi­nated East Germany.

“I have experience­d myself how a part of Germany was controlled by the Soviet Union,” she said, without mentioning Trump by name.

Trump’s verbal attack on Germany came in his first official event in Brussels Wednesday, setting a combative tone for the two-day summit of the alliance in Brussels. He leaves Brussels for two days in London Thursday, followed by a weekend in Scotland and his summit with Putin in Helsinki next Monday.

The harsh rhetoric suggested that Trump had no intention of patching up relationsh­ips bruised by a contentiou­s Group of Seven summit in Canada last month, when he refused to sign on to a routine joint declaratio­n calling for a reduction in tariffs.

Trump has criticized European allies for not spending what they agreed to on defense. Under a 2014 agreement, NATO set that amount at 2 percent of each country’s economic output.

But Trump upped the ante in a closed-door meeting with allies Wednesday, demanding they double that amount to 4 percent of gross domestic product. At a current spending level of 3.5 percent, even the United States does not meet that mark.

Germany spends just 1.24 percent on defense. But Trump also lambasted Germany’s support for a pipeline that would bring Russian natural gas through the Baltic Sea to central Europe.

“So we’re supposed to protect Germany, but they’re getting their energy from Russia. Explain that. And it can’t be explained,” he said.

“So we’re supposed to protect Germany, but they’re getting their energy from Russia. Explain that.”

President Donald Trump

The Nord Stream 2 pipeline is a commercial venture, but the German government has given its approval.

After a face-to-face meeting with Merkel later, Trump said the gas pipeline came up but seemed to shift his tone. “We have a very, very good relationsh­ip with the chancellor, we have a tremendous relationsh­ip with Germany,” he said.

A stoic Merkel responded, “I am pleased to have this opportunit­y to be here for this exchange of views.”

Merkel emphasized the German role in fighting alongside the U.S. in Afghanista­n and its commitment to the collective defense.

Trump’s comments prompted both the House and Senate to introduce nonbinding resolution­s affirming U.S. support for the alliance. The Senate resolution passed 97-2.

“I subscribe to the view that we should not be criticizin­g our president while he is overseas,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “NATO is indisnatio­nal pensable. It’s as important today as it ever has been.”

Democrats called Trump’s insults of Germany an “embarrassm­ent.”

“His behavior this morning is another profoundly disturbing signal that the president is more loyal to President Putin than to our NATO allies,” said a statement from Democratic leaders, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York.

Trump has linked defense and trade issues throughout his presidency, using security powers to impose tariffs against close allies like Canada and trade deficits as an argument for cutting U.S. defense aid to Europe.

At NATO, Trump pressed his recurring complaint that European allies aren’t paying enough toward the common defense of the alliance. A new NATO analysis released Tuesday shows only five of the 29 allies – the United States, the United Kingdom, Greece, Estonia and Latvia – currently meet the benchmark of 2 percent of economic output spent non defense.

“Just look at the chart,” Trump said at the breakfast. “Many countries are not paying what they should. And, frankly, many countries owe us a tremendous amount of money for many years back, where they’re delinquent, as far as I’m concerned, because the United States has had to pay for them.”

That complaint is a misreprese­ntation of the 2014 agreement reached at a summit in Wales. While each country agreed to strive for the 2 percent mark within 10 years, that spending is supposed to be on their own defense and is not paid to the United States or NATO.

Deirdre Shesgreen contribute­d from Washington.

 ?? GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? NATO’s Jens Stoltenber­g, Germany’s Angela Merkel and President Donald Trump gather for the allies’ “family photo.”
GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES NATO’s Jens Stoltenber­g, Germany’s Angela Merkel and President Donald Trump gather for the allies’ “family photo.”
 ?? STEPHANIE LECOCQ/EPA-EFE ?? President Donald Trump attends a meeting ahead of the NATO summit.
STEPHANIE LECOCQ/EPA-EFE President Donald Trump attends a meeting ahead of the NATO summit.

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