Sparing no words for Trump, Merkel vows cooperation with Biden
 
 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday warmly
offered to cooperate closely with Joe Biden after his election as America's
next president, a sharp contrast to her stern warning to Donald Trump four
years ago.
Underlining the President-elect's "decades of
experience in foreign policy" and recalling "good encounters and
talks with him", Merkel vowed to "stand together" with
Washington to overcome international challenges from the coronavirus pandemic
to global warming.
The marked change in tone to Trump's 2016 victory,
which Merkel had greeted with an extraordinary warning over democratic values,
came as Germany heaved a sigh of relief at Biden taking the White House even if
differences with Washington are expected to persist under the Democrat.
Merkel notably left the US billionaire leader and
his administration completely out of her message on the US election.
Be it over military spending or Germany's strong
exports, Trump, who is still contesting the US polls result, has made no effort
to hide his ire towards Europe's biggest economy.
But it was his contempt of international treaties
and multilateralism as he championed "America First" that deeply
shocked Germans.
Trump ripped up the Iran nuclear treaty early in his
term, slapped tariffs on EU steel and aluminium, and as Americans went to the
polls last week, the US formally left the Paris Climate Agreement.
Hailing Biden's victory, German leaders have rushed
to urge him to make good on his pre-election promise to reinstate the US on the
climate treaty again.
"The return of the US to these common ideals
offers the opportunity to stop the erosion of the international order,"
wrote German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier in an editorial for the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
"With a return to the Paris climate agreement,
renewed cooperation in the World Trade Organization, in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization and also in curbing Iran's nuclear programme, the USA can
once again counter the threat of international anarchy in which only 'maximum pressure'
counts, with a more optimistic vision of our common future," he added.
At the same time, Steinmeier underlined that four
years of Trump have also taught Germany the lesson that Europe needed to stand
on its own feet rather than wait for its transatlantic partner to take the
lead.
A point echoed by Merkel who said Europeans would do
more to pull their own weight.
"Germans and Europeans know that we must take
on more responsibility in this partnership in the 21st century," said
Merkel, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the EU.
"America is and remains our most important ally
but it expects us, and rightly so, to boost our efforts and to ensure our own
security and to stand up for our own convictions in the world," added the
German leader, who will step down next year.
The pragmatism came as analysts noted that not all
of Europe's interests may dovetail with those of the US.
Areas of friction will likely remain on military
spending, the controversial Russia-to-Europe gas pipeline Nord Stream 2, and
Washington's campaign against Chinese tech giant Huawei.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, who promised a
new start in transatlantic relationships, a "new deal", said Berlin
will make "concrete proposals on how we can close ranks -- in dealings
with players like China" for instance.
But faced with a Covid-19 battered economy, Biden
may well eschew Trump's protectionist tendencies while allowing some sort of
"America First" vision for sensitive industries to live on.
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier himself warned that
"specific sectors in the US have increased their competitiveness through
tariffs... and Joe Biden will not take this lightly either".
Foreign policy veteran Wolfgang Ischinger, who
chairs the Munich Security Conference, also noted that things won't
"simply be all good" again between Europe and the US under Biden.
Washington is expected to keep a critical eye on
Germany's softer approach with China and Berlin's reluctance to let go of Nord
Stream 2 which critics believe would give Russia too much control.
Nevertheless, a key difference lies in attitudes.
"We would be able to tackle these problems
together on the basis of a more trustworthy relationship between leaders,"
said Ischinger.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


