Orlando Sentinel

European leaders appear comfortabl­e going it alone

Merkel, others not waiting on Trump’s blessing on policy

- By Catherine Stupp Special to Los Angeles Times Catherine Stupp is a special correspond­ent.

HAMBURG, Germany — When President Donald Trump visited a NATO meeting and a Group of 7 summit on his first trip abroad as U.S. leader in May, some European leaders hesitated to say too much about his controvers­ial views on such issues as trade, immigratio­n and the environmen­t.

But now they appear more willing to make moves with or without affirmatio­n from the U.S.

On Thursday, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk announced a sweeping free trade agreement between the 28-nation European Union and Japan. When he took office in January, Trump canceled the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p, President Barack Obama’s free trade agreement with Pacific Rim countries.

The European Union has become a “global point of reference” on issues as diverse as climate change and terrorism, Juncker and Tusk said this week.

Among leaders attending the Group of 20 summit of industrial­ized nations in Hamburg, Juncker and Tusk aren’t the only ones who see Trump’s recent rejection of the Paris agreement on climate change — which sets a cap on emissions thought to cause global warming — and multi-country free trade agreements as a chance for the continent to lead on those issues.

“While we seek chances to cooperate for everyone’s benefit, globalizat­ion is seen in the American administra­tion as a process which isn’t about win-win situations but about winners and losers,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in an interview published Wednesday in the newspaper Die Zeit.

She told the German Parliament last week that it would be “delusional” if any leaders avoid working with other countries on global issues such as climate change and trade, which will be in focus during the leaders’ discussion­s on Friday and Saturday in Hamburg.

Merkel has emerged as an advocate for globalizat­ion and free trade.

She has been more outspoken than most of her counterpar­ts. Her relationsh­ip with Trump quickly became fraught after he publicly criticized Germany’s trade surplus with the U.S. and threatened to slap tariffs on German cars.

Merkel and Trump met in Hamburg on Thursday. A German government spokesman said they discussed North Korea, the Middle East and the conflict in eastern Ukraine during their hourlong meeting in a hotel.

“We already know (Trump’s) different approach, we know what he’s said, we know the uncertaint­y it has created,” said Norbert Roettgen, a German member of Parliament from Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union party.

“Some European member states don’t believe any more that Trump can redeem himself. They think there is not much to expect. Others might not expect much either but are not ready to play the America bashing game,” said Pierre Vimont, an analyst at the Brussels-based think tank Carnegie Europe who was previously a French ambassador to the U.S.

But Trump’s visit has highlighte­d fault lines dividing European countries, with Poland hosting him before the G-20 summit. Polish politician­s touted the visit as a sign that the two countries have especially strong ties.

Ahead of Trump’s oneon-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, Eastern European countries were especially worried that any agreement between the two leaders could stir tension in the region.

It was only days after returning from Europe in May that Trump announced he would take the U.S. out of the Paris agreement. European leaders have lined up to voice their disappoint­ment.

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER/AP ?? President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pose for a photograph Thursday before a meeting on the eve of the Group of 20 summit in Germany.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER/AP President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pose for a photograph Thursday before a meeting on the eve of the Group of 20 summit in Germany.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States