Los Angeles Times

PRELUDE TO G-7 SUMMIT

The odd couple recommit to nations’ ‘special relationsh­ip’

- By Eli Stokols

President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden meet with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and wife Carrie in England. The two leaders reaffirmed the special ties between the U.S. and Britain.

PLYMOUTH, England — President Biden and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson agreed during an allied summit on Thursday to a path toward reopening travel between the United States and the United Kingdom, part of a much broader effort to renew the 80year-old partnershi­p between their countries with a flurry of new cooperatio­n.

In a meeting here ahead of the Group of 7 summit that starts Friday, the two leaders, despite their political and personal difference­s, highlighte­d new opportunit­ies for collaborat­ion on major global challenges, including climate change, to demonstrat­e the resilience of the world’s democracie­s.

Biden said the 90-minute meeting with Johnson was very productive.

“We affirmed the special relationsh­ip — and it’s not said lightly, the special relationsh­ip between our people — and renewed our commitment to defending the enduring democratic values that both of our nations share,” he added.

Besides announcing a new working group on easing pandemic-related travel restrictio­ns, Biden and Johnson also unveiled new efforts to boost global COVID-19 vaccine supplies, including a U.S. donation of 500 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine for 100 underserve­d nations, and more ambitious commitment­s to reduce carbon emissions to slow the pace of climate change. The U.K. plans to donate 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine, Johnson announced later, adding that he expected the other G-7 nations to push the total number of donations to 1 billion doses.

In a gesture heavy with symbolism, Biden and Johnson examined the original Atlantic Charter, the declaratio­n signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1941 on American and British goals for the world once World War II was over. And they reaffirmed their countries’ partnershi­p by agreeing to an updated version of the pact that emphasized shared democratic values.

With authoritar­ianism and nationalis­m on the rise, the new charter outlines priorities, values and challenges that include defending democracy, reaffirmin­g the importance of collective security, building a fairer and more sustainabl­e global trading system, combating cyberattac­ks, addressing the climate crisis, protecting biodiversi­ty and ending the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We intend to strengthen the institutio­ns, laws and norms that sustain internatio­nal cooperatio­n to adapt them to meet the new challenges of the 21st century, and guard against those that would undermine them,” the revamped charter states.

Biden and Johnson said in a joint statement after meeting that they also agreed to pursue a bilateral technology agreement to reduce barriers for British tech firms in working with U.S. companies. They also agreed to open a new dialogue on energy, and committed to a joint summit on boosting efforts to cure cancer.

Johnson seemed to speak on behalf of the other G-7 leaders convening this weekend, telling Biden, “Everybody’s absolutely thrilled to see you.”

Johnson told reporters later that the meeting had affirmed a bilateral relationsh­ip that he said was of “massive, massive strategic importance for the prosperity, the security of the world.” Biden, he said, was “a breath of fresh air.”

Speaking from his hotel’s lawn, Biden touted his administra­tion’s new commitment to boosting global vaccinatio­n efforts. After having raised the ire of some world leaders by not sharing surplus vaccines with other nations sooner, the president said that donating the 500 million Pfizer vaccines demonstrat­ed “our responsibi­lity to our values” and that the U.S. will continue to play a leading role in aiding other countries.

“In times of trouble, Americans reach out,” Biden said.

The first meeting between these two leaders wasn’t without a measure of awkwardnes­s, which both leaders sought publicly to defuse.

The tensions were mostly related to Brexit and unresolved issues stemming from the U.K.’s exit from the European Union late last year. The geopolitic­al disruption threatens the Good Friday Agreement — the peace deal in Northern Ireland that was brokered more than two decades ago with the help of American politician­s, including Biden.

Johnson, asked about that issue following his talks with Biden, said he was “optimistic” that all sides would find a way to maintain the Good Friday Agreement.

Biden, who opposed Brexit, had already made it clear to Johnson — who rose to power by supporting it — that the United States expects to see the peace treaty maintained, according to national security advisor Jake Sullivan. It would be up to Biden and Johnson, Sullivan said, to work out the particular­s.

“Whatever way they find to proceed must at its core fundamenta­lly protect the gains of the Good Friday Agreement and not imperil that,” Sullivan said earlier this week when asked about the message Biden wanted to send.

Johnson, often called the “British Trump,” including by the former U.S. president, began his rise to power when British voters, in a big surprise, narrowly approved the 2016 Brexit referendum he supported. Johnson was elected prime minister in 2019 and inherited the complex job of carrying out Brexit.

As he looks to demonstrat­e his country’s strength and resilience as an independen­t entity outside of the EU, Johnson finds his nation perhaps more reliant on the U.S. That is evidenced by the desires for a new trade pact between the two nations, and for continued and expanded security cooperatio­n.

“What we’re seeing in a postBrexit U.K. is a U.K. that wants to stay as close as possible in lockstep with the United States on its military posture, particular­ly on technology and cyber capabiliti­es,” said Heather A. Conley, a specialist on Europe at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington think tank.

President Trump’s defeat in November seemed to leave Johnson with a less compatible personalit­y in the White House — one who speaks with pride about his Irish heritage, for example. During the 2020 campaign, Biden even referred to Johnson as a “physical and emotional clone” of Trump.

The two leaders seemed chummy enough when they appeared before the media at the meeting’s outset, with Biden bantering about how they both “married above their station” and Johnson responding in kind: “I’m not going to disagree with the president on that, or indeed on anything else, I think, either.”

As a gesture of friendship and in recognitio­n of their shared interest in cycling, Biden gave Johnson an American-made touring bicycle and a bike helmet custom-made by a small family business in Philadelph­ia, according to the White House.

But it was First Lady Jill Biden who made perhaps the clearest statement — without speaking a word. Her jacket, the back embroidere­d with sequined letters reading “Love,” seemed to offer a pointed contrast to the acidic effect of the Trump presidency on the world stage, and specifical­ly to the jacket former First Lady Melania Trump infamously wore during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border that read, “I really don’t care, do u?”

Asked about her choice of clothing while her husband and Johnson were meeting, the current first lady said the jacket’s message was intentiona­l, although she demurred when asked whether it was meant as a rejoinder to her predecesso­r.

“I think that we’re bringing love from America,” she said. “This is a global conference, and we are trying to bring unity across the globe, and I think it’s needed right now, that people feel a sense of unity from all the countries and feel a sense of hope after this year of the pandemic.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ??
Patrick Semansky Associated Press
 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has been called the “British Trump,” reached agreement on several issues despite some Brexit-related tension.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press PRESIDENT BIDEN and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has been called the “British Trump,” reached agreement on several issues despite some Brexit-related tension.

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