Iran deal ‘not sufficient’ to curb nuke program: Merkel

WASHINGTON - German Chancellor Angela Merkel, standing alongside President Donald Trump at the White House, said Friday that the existing international accord on Iran is not enough to curb the Islamic republic’s nuclear ambitions.

The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, signed by Tehran and six world powers including Germany and the United States, is “a first step that has contributed to slowing down their activities in this particular respect,” Merkel told reporters. “But we also think from a German perspective that this is not sufficient in order to see to it that Iran’s ambitions are curbed and contained.” “Europe and the United States ought to be in lock step on this,” she said.

Trump hosts ‘extraordinary woman’ Merkel

Donald Trump warmly welcomed German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House Friday for talks the US president said would focus on Iran, international trade and military ties.

Merkel arrives facing an uphill struggle to save the Iran nuclear deal, avoid a trade war and make her relationship with the US president functional again.

The German leader’s visit has already been overshadowed by a backslapping three-day festival of “fraternite” between Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron this week.

Aware of the optics, anxious German diplomats pressed - in vain - for Merkel to enjoy a similarly meaty two days at the White House, betting the face time would help sweeten difficult relations, officials told AFP.

But the visit got off to a surprisingly warm start, and the body language showed. The two leaders exchanged kisses on the cheek as Merkel emerged from her limousine, and Trump then praised her as “an extraordinary woman” as they sat together in the Oval Office.

“We actually have had a great relationship right from the beginning but some people didn’t understand that,” Trump told reporters. “But we understand it, and that’s what’s important.”

When Merkel last came to Washington, the cautious dry-witted chancellor held several awkward joint appearances with her more impulsive host - clashing publicly over defense spending, trade and migration.

This time around, the tricolor French flags were only just removed in time for Merkel’s arrival for a one day, run-of-the-mill “working visit.”

The stylistic differences between the Macron and Merkel visits are “very telling” according to Mona Krewel of Cornell University. It points, she said, “to the much more difficult relationship Trump has with Merkel.”

New US envoy Pompeo targets Germany over Nato spending

New US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo took aim at Germany over its defence spending Friday, using his first NATO meeting to push President Donald Trump’s call for allies to shoulder a bigger burden.

As a meeting of alliance foreign ministers put on a united front on the need to counter Russian “aggression”, Pompeo hammered home one of Trump’s oldest themes - demanding that NATO members pay their way. Some allies, including Europe’s economic powerhouse Germany, have been reluctant to meet a commitment made at a NATO summit in Wales in September 2014 to spend two percent of GDP on defence by 2024.

Trump has repeatedly declared this to be tantamount to countries not paying their dues, and former CIA boss Pompeo carried a tough message to NATO headquarters in Brussels.

Asked if Germany was doing enough to meet the target, Pompeo said bluntly: “No. They should meet the goals that they agreed to.”

“European nations must bear the necessary responsibilities for their security and make the case to their fellow citizens why it is critical to fulfil their obligations on defence spending,” Pompeo told reporters after the meeting.

Pompeo’s comments came as German Chancellor Angela Merkel was heading to the White House for talks with Trump.

His stark language contrasted with what Luxembourg’s veteran Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said was a more diplomatic approach in the meeting itself.

“Mike Pompeo of course insisted on the need for burden-sharing, but he did it without aggression,” Asselborn told AFP.

“On the contrary he was attentive, he listened and took part in all the discussions.”

As he arrived for the talks Germany’s new Foreign Minister Heiko Maas stressed the contribution Berlin was making to humanitarian work in Syria and to Iraq.

He said Merkel’s coalition government was in the middle of budget negotiations, but held out little prospect that they would lead to a defence spending boost.

And he stressed Germany “has an extraordinary presence in terms of its perception of its international responsibility and that we are also fulfilling our obligations to NATO.”

Away from the harsh words on funding there was agreement among foreign ministers on the need to find ways to counter Russia’s adoption of “hybrid warfare” techniques - subversion, propaganda, cyber warfare - to undermine the West without triggering a full NATO military response.

Pompeo sought to ease lingering concerns about Trump’s commitment to NATO, saying the alliance was “more indispensible than ever” due to Russia’s “unacceptable” actions, from Georgia to Ukraine to political meddling.

Noting that the talks were the first NATO ministerial meeting since Russian agents allegedly used a nerve agent to poison a former double agent in the English town of Salisbury, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson summarised the dilemma.

“How do you deal with a military environment in which attacks come below the threshold of the Article 5 commitment to mutual support but do demand a common response?” he asked, referring to the alliance’s mutual self-defence pact.

Ministers discussed concrete proposals to address the problem, a senior State Department official told reporters, but they are not expected to be finalised and announced before NATO’s full summit on July 11 and 12.

“There was consensus on Russian aggression, the scale of Russian aggression and this being a problem that requires a response,” the official said.

Tensions between NATO and Russia are running at levels not seen since the Cold War, but NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg insisted the alliance was still open to dialogue with Moscow.

“We agreed that our dual-track policy of strong deterrence and defence combined with meaningful dialogue is the right one,” Stoltenberg said.

“When tensions are high, our dialogue is more important than ever,” he added, saying the alliance was working for another meeting of the NATO-Russia Council.

Ministers also debated plans to expand NATO’s training mission in Iraq. Details will be confirmed at the summit in July, but Stoltenberg said it would involve several hundred personnel.

After his time in Brussels, Pompeo will head to the Middle East, with stops in Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia - countries chosen to reflect what his spokeswoman called “importance as key allies and partners in the region.

 

 

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