International News

Merkel warns US, Britain no longer reliable partners

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, May 28, (APP/AFP) – Europe “must take
its fate into its own hands” faced with a western alliance divided
by Brexit and Donald Trump’s presidency, German Chancellor Angela Merkel
said Sunday.
“The times in which we could completely depend on others are on the
way out. I’ve experienced that in the last few days,” Merkel told a
crowd at an election rally in Munich, southern Germany.
“We Europeans truly have to take our fate into our own hands,” she
added.
While Germany and Europe would strive to remain on good terms with
America and Britain, “we have to fight for our own destiny”, Merkel
went on.
Special emphasis was needed on warm relations between Berlin and
newly-elected French President Emmanuel Macron, she said.
The chancellor had just returned from a G7 summit which wound up
Saturday without a deal between the US and the other six major advanced nations on upholding the 2015 Paris climate accords.
Merkel on Saturday labelled the result of the “six against one”
discussion “very difficult, not to say very unsatisfactory”.
Trump offered a more positive assessment on Twitter Sunday, writing:
“Just returned from Europe. Trip was a great success for America.
Hard work but big results!”
The US president had earlier tweeted that he would reveal
whether or not the US would stick to the global emissions deal —
which he pledged to jettison on the campaign trail — only next week.
On a previous leg of his first trip abroad as president, Trump had
repeated past criticism of NATO allies for failing to meet the defensive alliance’s military spending commitment of two percent of GDP.
Observers noted that he neglected to publicly endorse the pact’s
Article Five, which guarantees that member countries will aid the others they are attacked.
The omission was especially striking as he unveiled a memorial
to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the US, the only time the mutual defence clause has been triggered.
Trump also reportedly described German trade practices as
“bad, very bad,” in Brussels talks last week, complaining that Europe’s largest economy sells too many cars to the US.
Sunday’s event saw Merkel renew bonds with the Christian
Social Union (CSU), Bavarian sister party to her own
centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), ahead of a
parliamentary vote in September.
Polls show the chancellor, in power since 2005, on course to be
re-elected for a fourth term.