What's eating Trump, Putin, Hollande, Merkel, May, Rouhani and Abe?

The Guardian
What's eating Trump, Putin, Hollande, Merkel, May, Rouhani and Abe?

A telephone talk between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump at Saturday’s night was acclaimed enthusiastically in Russia, the US, and other countries. Vestnik Kavkaza presents an article by The Guardian, which is devoted to these and other talks of Trump last week.

A day of whirlwind diplomacy for Donald Trump on Saturday, including calls to five world leaders including Russian president Vladimir Putin, was overshadowed by a global backlash against his ban on refugees. The “congratulatory call” with Putin lasted an hour, the White House said in a short statement, and ranged from discussion of “mutual cooperation” to defeat the terror group Isis to negotiating an end to the Syrian civil war. “The positive call was a significant start to improving the relationship between the United States and Russia that is in need of repair,” the White House said. In the Kremlin’s more detailed account, Trump and Putin discussed “partnership” on a wide range of international issues, including wars in the Middle East, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Iran’s nuclear program, the Korean peninsula and the simmering war in Ukraine.

Cooperation in Ukraine would represent a stark turn in US policy, which has supported Kiev and imposed punitive sanctions against prominent Russians for the Kremlin’s role in the crisis. Those sanctions, which Trump has mused about removing, were not mentioned in the Russian readout of the call, but the Kremlin said the leaders had discussed “the importance of restoring mutually beneficial economic-trade links”.

Trump also spoke to German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president François Hollande, both of whom are sharply at odds with his radical refugee vetting policy. The White House said Merkel and Trump spoke about Russia and Ukraine, and “agreed on the Nato alliance’s fundamental importance to the broader transatlantic relationship and its role in ensuring the peace and stability of our North Atlantic community”.

Merkel has stood staunchly against Trump’s denigrations of Nato, which he has called “obsolete”. He has also accused allies of failing to pay their dues for military defense, a dispute alluded to by the White House, which said the leaders discussed “appropriate investment in military capabilities to ensure all Allies are contributing their fair share to our collective security”. The White House did not say whether Merkel and Trump discussed refugees, hundreds of thousands of whom Germany has received in the last year. In a recent interview, Trump described Merkel’s open-door policy as “a catastrophic mistake”.

Trump has had a roller coaster ride in his first week as a world statesman. His meeting with British prime minister Theresa May at the White House passed successfully but a crisis erupted with neighbouring Mexico, whose president, Enrique Peña Nieto, abruptly cancelled a planned visit. Trump had moved ahead with plans for a border wall and appeared to threaten a hefty border tax on Mexican imports. 

The US president began Saturday by calling Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who visited him at Trump Tower in New York during the transition. “President Trump affirmed the ironclad US commitment to ensuring the security of Japan,” the White House said. During the election campaign, Trump suggested that America’s defence of Japan was too one-sided and expensive. Trump and Abe also discussed the threat posed by North Korea and “committed to deepen the bilateral trade and investment relationship” ahead of a meeting in Washington on 10 February, the White House added. Earlier this week, the US withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a flagship 12-country deal drawn up by Barack Obama, raising the prospect of a bilateral agreement with Japan.

Earlier on Saturday, French foreign minister Jean-Marc Ayrault held talks with Germany’s Sigmar Gabriel in Paris. Ayrault said Trump’s order on Friday – barring all refugees from entering the US for four months and those from war-ravaged Syria indefinitely – “can only worry us”. The French minister told a press conference: “We have signed international obligations, so welcoming refugees fleeing war and oppression forms part of our duties.” Gabriel told reporters: “The United States is a country where Christian traditions have an important meaning. Loving your neighbour is a major Christian value, and that includes helping people. I think that is what unites us in the west, and I think that is what we want to make clear to the Americans.”

Trump’s executive order, which he said will keep out “radical Islamic terrorists”, has been condemned within the US and around the world. No visas will be issued for migrants or visitors from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for at least 90 days.

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday now was “not the time to build walls between nations”. Speaking at a tourism convention in Tehran, he added: “They have forgotten that the Berlin Wall collapsed many years ago. Even if there are walls between nations, they must be removed.” An Iranian foreign ministry statement said the executive order was an “open affront against the Muslim world and the Iranian nation” and said Iran would “take appropriate consular, legal and political measures” in response. “Instead of countering terrorism and protecting American people, these measures will be written in history as a gift to extremists and their supporters,” the statement said.

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