A
few of my readers have expressed some degree of surprise after reading what I
wrote in my last blog about President Trump’s policy towards the EU. I
basically said the President is not in favour of a strong EU. And that is a radical
change of approach, because for decades his predecessors have encouraged the
European countries to cooperate and strengthen the EU. Even in the case of the
UK, the message coming from Washington has always been in the sense of advising
London to be closer to Continental Europe.
With President Trump, we have a new situation.
First, he sees the EU as economic competition and a market that is huge but has
too many barriers when it comes to some critical American exports, such as cars
and farm products. But there is more to it, beyond the economic and trade
issues. He thinks that the key EU leaders have an international agenda that
contradicts his own and weakens it. That is the case on climate, on Iran, on
Russia, on Cuba and Venezuela, on multilateralism, even on China. Not to
mention the new idea of a European common defence, an idea that Emmanuel Macron
personalises. On defence, President Trump follows a line that has been present
in Washington for long now: the Europeans must spend more on their armies but
keep them under the overall control and command of the US military. He senses
that in this area the European response is becoming more independent and he
does not like it at all.
August
is not a good time to discuss these matters. People on both sides of the
Atlantic are above all concerned with the weather and their holidays. It is however
a debate that must be reopened after the rentrée in September.
No comments:
Post a Comment