Arab Times

Biden, Johnson strike convivial tone

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CARBIS BAY, England, June 10, (AP): President Joe Biden and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson met for the first time Thursday, looking to highlight their nations’ famed “special relationsh­ip” but doing so against a backdrop of difference­s both political and personal.

Biden hopes to use his first overseas trip as president to reassure European allies that the United States had shed the transactio­nal tendencies of Donald Trump’s term and is a reliable partner again. Tensions could simmer beneath the surface, but the leaders immediatel­y struck a tone of conviviali­ty.

“I told the prime minister we have something in common. We both married way above our station,” Biden joked after a highly choreograp­hed walk with their spouses.

Johnson laughed and said he was “not going to dissent from that one” but then seemed to hint that he would be looking to only improve relations with his American counterpar­t.

“I’m not going to disagree with you on that,” said Johnson, “or indeed on anything else.”

But there are areas of disagreeme­nt. The president staunchly opposed the Brexit movement, the British exodus from the European Union that Johnson championed, and has expressed great concern with the future of Northern Ireland. And Biden once called the British leader a “physical and emotional clone” of Trump.

The British government has worked hard to overcome that impression, stressing Johnson’s common ground with Biden on issues such as climate change and his support for internatio­nal institutio­ns. But Johnson, the host for the Group of Seven summit that will follow his sit-down with Biden, has been frustrated by the lack of a new trade deal with the United States.

Before their formal discussion­s, the two men looked back on illustriou­s wartime predecesso­r, inspecting documents related to the Atlantic Charter, a declaratio­n signed by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt in August 1941 setting out common goals for the world after World War II, including freer trade, disarmamen­t and the right to self-determinat­ion of all people.

Johnson noted that the charter laid the foundation for the United Nations and NATO.

“Yeah, I know,” said Biden, who later pumped his fist when he - incorrectl­y - suggested that Neville Chamberlai­n slipped a reference to labor unions into the document, an unlikely salute for the disgraced appeaser on the eve of the war.

The leaders had planned to visit the spectacula­r island of St. Michael’s Mount but the trip was scrapped because of bad weather. Instead, they met above the beach at the G-7 site in Carbis Bay, staring out at the ocean while trading pleasantri­es.

Both couples - Johnson is newly married - held hands as they walked. First lady Jill Biden’s black jacket had “LOVE” embroidere­d on the upper back - a fashion move that recalled her predecesso­r Melania Trump’s decision to wear a jacket with “I really don’t care, do u?” on the back during a 2018 trip to a Texas border town.

Reporters

The first lady told reporters that the president was “over prepared” for his meetings during his week in Europe, including a trip-ending summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

“He’s been studying for weeks, working up to today,” she said. “Joe loves foreign policy.”

The leaders were expected to announce a new U.S.-U.K. task force to work on resuming travel between the two nations, according to a White House official. Most travel has been banned between the two nations since March 2020.

Both sides have stressed publicly that the meeting would be about reaffirmin­g ties between longtime allies in a week in which Biden will look to rally the West to rebuff Russian meddling and publicly demonstrat­e it can compete economical­ly with China.

National security adviser Jake Sullivan described Biden’s initial calls with Johnson as “warm” and “constructi­ve” and played down any difference­s between the two nations’ goals.

“They’ve been very much down to business,” Sullivan said earlier this week. “And I expect that their meeting together will just cover the waterfront. I mean, really, a wide range of issues where the two of them and the U.S and United Kingdom do see eye to eye.”

Biden, who is fiercely proud of his Irish roots, has warned that nothing should undermine Northern Ireland’s 1998 Good Friday peace accord. Some on the British side have viewed Biden warily because of his heritage. White House officials have said the United States does not plan to be involved in the negotiatio­ns and that Biden would not lecture Johnson but would urge that a resolution be reached expeditiou­sly.

After Brexit, a new arrangemen­t was needed for the border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom, and Ireland, because the European Union requires certain goods to be inspected and others not to be admitted at all. Ahead of a June 30 deadline, ongoing negotiatio­ns over goods - including sausages - have been contentiou­s and have attracted the attention of the White House.

The two leaders also were expected to discuss climate change, the coronaviru­s pandemic, creating an infrastruc­ture financing program for developing countries, Afghanista­n and a refresher of the 80-year-old charter between the two nations, Sullivan said. There were also plans to launch a bilateral commission to research and defeat cancer. White House officials suggested that it not be read as another Cold Warera document but a pathway for an increasing­ly complex, interconne­cted globe.

But Trump’s presence was still likely to be felt on Thursday. Johnson and Trump, for a time, appeared to be kindred spirits, both riding a wave of populism that in 2016 delivered Brexit and upended the American political landscape.

Biden, for his part, has expressed a mistrust of Johnson, who once unspooled a Trump-like insult of President Barack Obama, saying that Biden’s former boss was “half-Kenyan” and had an ancestral dislike of Britain.

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