Waterloo Region Record

Climate move puts U.S. on lonely path

- Julie Pace The Associated Press

We don’t want other countries laughing at us. U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out of the landmark Paris climate accord sends an unmistakab­le message to the world: America First can mean America Alone.

Trump’s move, announced with great fanfare in the White House Rose Garden on Thursday, immediatel­y leaves the United States isolated on a paramount global concern. It demonstrat­es the U.S. is willing to back away from a coalition it assembled just 18 months ago. Nearly 200 countries joined the landmark deal forged under Trump’s predecesso­r. Now the U.S. stands with only Syria and Nicaragua as countries on the sidelines. Nicaragua balked because it found the deal’s standards insufficie­nt.

It’s a bitter blow to stalwart European partners who launched an aggressive campaign to convince Trump that American leadership is central to combating climate change. Even a direct appeal from the Vatican wasn’t enough to persuade the president.

Miguel Arias Canete, the European Union’s top climate change official, called Trump’s decision “a sad day for the global community.”

For anxious allies, Trump’s rejection of the Paris pact is particular­ly jarring in the wake of his first internatio­nal trip last week. Standing in the heart of Europe, Trump publicly lectured NATO partners about their military commitment­s and offered no explicit endorsemen­t for the collective defence agreement at the core of trans-Atlantic security for decades. His stunning posture left the distinct impression that for the new American president, the nation’s long-standing obligation­s to allies are neither unshakable nor unbreakabl­e.

Trump did little to quell those concerns Thursday. Offering a glimpse into his apparent anxiety over how he’s viewed, Trump argued that the same countries practicall­y begging him to stay in the accord were in fact mocking the United States’ participat­ion.

“We don’t want other countries laughing at us anymore and they won’t,” Trump declared. “I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris.”

Indeed, Trump’s supporters cheered the decision, which marked the fulfilment both of his campaign promise to scrap the climate accord and his broader pledge to put American interests above all else.

Trump’s record of holding to those promises is mixed. He moved swiftly to withdraw from the sweeping Pacific Rim trade pact that president Barack Obama’s administra­tion negotiated, but has signalled to other countries that he plans to stay in the nuclear deal so long as Iran lives up to its obligation­s.

To be sure, Trump is hardly the first American president to turn his back on a predecesso­r’s internatio­nal agreement. President George W. Bush provoked similar anger from European allies when he decided not to implement the 1997 Kyoto climate change treaty, which was ratified by 140 countries. Bush made a similar argument to the one outlined by Trump Thursday, saying it put the U.S. at a disadvanta­ge compared with major polluters like China and India.

Since the election, administra­tion officials have laboured to explain that Trump does not intend to insulate the U.S. from the rest of the world or leave allies in a lurch. White House advisers point to Trump’s decision to renegotiat­e, rather than scrap, the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico as a sign that the president isn’t recoiling from all of America’s commitment­s.

Trump left open the prospect that he’ll ultimately take a similar approach to the Paris pact, announcing Thursday that while the U.S. will immediatel­y stop complying with the standards, his administra­tion will begin negotiatio­ns to seek a better deal. It’s unclear why the U.S. would need to start such negotiatio­ns, given that the climate agreement gave each country the ability to set its own targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

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