Khaleej Times

Trade talks show Trump, Merkel have little or no common ground

- Patrick Donahue and Toluse Olorunnipa Donald Trump meets Angela Merkel in the Oval Office of the White House on Friday.

washington — Donald Trump’s and Angela Merkel’s rhetoric on global trade showed no sign that the two leaders are anywhere close to finding common ground.

In their first meeting at the White House since Trump’s inaugurati­on as president, Trump reprised his complaints that the US had been treated “very, very unfairly” and poured loaded praise over German trade officials for besting their American counterpar­ts.

“The negotiator­s for Germany have done a far better job than the negotiator­s for the United States,” Trump told reporters in the East Room alongside Merkel on Friday. “But hopefully we can even it out.”

Merkel, whose visit with her new US counterpar­t was marked by cool distance in their public appearance­s, was left to explain that trade negotiatio­ns are the province of the European Union, not her government, and that there are no such German interlocut­ors.

“We’ve transferre­d competenci­es over to the European Union,” Merkel said. “That means the European Commission negotiates these free trade agreements.”

The gap in perception between a president in office for eight weeks and a German chancellor who has governed for almost 12 years may foreshadow the widening chasm across the Atlantic. Merkel had no illusion of the difference­s between her globally oriented view of geopolitic­s and the “America First” dictum with which Trump has unsettled traditiona­l US partners.

The two were left to talk, based on the premise that, in Merkel’s words, “it’s much better to speak with each other than past each other.”

Even though Trump didn’t respond to requests from photograph­ers for a handshake as he and Merkel sat for talks in the Oval Office, the two greeted each other warmly moments before on her arrival. At a business round table, at which the German leader was sat next to Ivanka Trump, the president ignored a shouted question about whether he’d used their meeting to repeat criticisms he made during the presidenti­al campaign of her policy accepting Syrian refugees.

Trump, who as a candidate who called Merkel’s migration stance “insane,” offered little of the effusive praise to which Merkel became accustomed to from former President Barack Obama. For her part, Merkel made clear that the two don’t see eye — AP to eye — and several times echoed the president’s language of pursuing “fair” treatment.

“Even if there are difference­s of opinion, it’s worth sitting down together,” Merkel said. The two sides should at least strive to find “compromise­s that are fair to both.”

Trump’s complaint on trade reflected comments by the head of his National Trade Council, Peter Navarro, who has laid into Germany’s trade surplus, accusing Europe’s biggest economy of exploiting

The negotiator­s for Germany have done a far better job than the negotiator­s for the United States Donald Trump, US President

Even if there are difference­s of opinion, it’s worth sitting down together Angela Merkel, German Chancellor

its position within the euro area to gain advantage. He was among those in the audience for the news conference. Merkel and her government have rejected those accusation­s as absurd.

“I don’t believe in an isolationi­st policy, but I also believe that a policy of trade should be a fair policy,” Trump said.

The US leader did suggest an affinity in another area. Asked about his unsubstant­iated claims that the Obama administra­tion had placed him under surveillan­ce late last year, Trump made reference to the disclosure in 2013 that the National Security Agency had been tapping Merkel’s mobile phone. “As far as wiretappin­g, I guess, by this past administra­tion, at least we have something in common, perhaps,” Trump said, drawing laughter.

Merkel, who had been taking notes during most of Trump’s remarks, stared ahead, without reacting. — Bloomberg

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