A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 29, 2017
Following Trump’s trip, Merkel says Europe can’t rely on ‘others.’ She means the U.S.
After recent summits, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said May 28 that Europe must take its fate into its own hands. (Reuters)
After recent summits, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said May 28 that Europe must take its fate into its own hands. (Reuters)
By Michael Birnbaum and Rick Noack May 28 at 2:47 PM
LONDON — German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday declared a new chapter in U.S.-European relations after contentious meetings with President Trump last week, saying that Europe “really must take our fate into our own hands.”
LONDON — German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday declared a new chapter in U.S.-European relations after contentious meetings with President Trump last week, saying that Europe “really must take our fate into our own hands.”
Offering a tough review in the wake of Trump’s trip to
visit E.U., NATO and Group of Seven leaders last week, Merkel told a
packed Bavarian beer hall rally that the days when Europe could rely on
others was “over to a certain extent. This is what I have experienced in
the last few days.”
It was a stark declaration from the leader of Europe’s most powerful
economy, and a grim take on the transatlantic ties that have underpinned
Western security in the generations since World War II. Although
relations between Washington and Europe have been strained during
periods since 1945, before Trump there has rarely been such a strong
feeling from European leaders that they must turn away from Washington
and prepare to face the world alone.
Merkel said that Europe’s need to go it alone should be done “of course
in friendship with the United States of America, in friendship with
Great Britain and as good neighbors wherever that works.”
But it was a clear repudiation of Trump’s troubled few days with
European leaders, even as she held back from mentioning the U.S.
president by name. On Thursday, Trump had stern words for German trade
behind closed doors. Hours later, he blasted European leaders at NATO for
failing to spend enough on defense, while holding back from offering an
unconditional guarantee for European security. Then, at the Group of
Seven summit of leaders of major world economies on Friday and Saturday,
he refused to endorse the Paris agreements on combating climate change,
punting a decision until next week.
Merkel’s
comments were similar to some she made shortly after Trump’s November
election. But they carry extra heft now that Trump is actually in office
– and after Trump had a days-long opportunity to reset relations with
Washington’s closest allies. Instead, by most European accounts he
strained them even more.
Trump – who returned from his nine-day international trip on Saturday – had a different take.
“Just returned from Europe. Trip was a great success for America. Hard
work but big results!” Trump wrote on Sunday, reviving a prolific
Twitter habit that had slackened during his days on the road.
But many European leaders emerged from their meetings with Trump filled
with fresh worry that an earthquake truly had hit transatlantic
relations. Trump was far more solicitous toward the autocratic king of
Saudi Arabia earlier in the week, telling him and other leaders of
Muslim-majority countries – many of them not democratically elected –
that he was not “here to lecture.” Days later in Brussels he offered a
scathing assessment of Washington’s closest allies, saying they were
being “unfair” to American taxpayers.
“The belief in shared values has been shattered by the Trump
administration,” said Stephan Bierling, an expert on transatlantic
relations at Germany’s University of Regensburg. “After the
inauguration, everyone in Europe was hopeful that Trump would become
more moderate and take into account the positions of the G-7 and of
NATO. But the opposite has happened. It’s as if he is still trying to
win a campaign.”
The United States remains the largest economy in the world, and its
military is indispensable for European security, putting a clear limit
on Europe’s ability to declare independence. American consumers also
form an important market for European products – including the German
BMWs that Trump complained about in closed-door meetings in Brussels,
according to German press accounts.
But Merkel has expressed willingness to jolt her nation’s military spending upwards, a first step both to answering American criticism that
it falls far short of NATO pledges and to lessening its dependence on
the U.S. security blanket. Germany hiked its military spending by $2.2
billion this year, to $41 billion, but it remains far from being able to
stand on its own militarily.
European leaders feel more confident now than they did a month or two
ago, following the landslide presidential victory this month in France
of Emmanuel Macron. His ascent to power helped put a mental cap on a
one-two hit last year after Britain voted to leave the European Union
and the nationalist Trump was elected in the United States.