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Embattled at home, Trump finds himself isolated abroad, too

NEW YORK TIMES
                                President Donald Trump walks out of the Oval Office to make a statement in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington on Wednesday. After years of snubs and American unilateralism, European allies have stopped looking to the president for leadership, and are turning their backs on him.

NEW YORK TIMES

President Donald Trump walks out of the Oval Office to make a statement in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington on Wednesday. After years of snubs and American unilateralism, European allies have stopped looking to the president for leadership, and are turning their backs on him.

BRUSSELS >> With U.S. cities burning and the coronavirus still raging, killing more people than in any other country, President Donald Trump also has growing problems overseas. He has never before been so isolated and ignored, even mocked.

In Europe, after years of snubs and U.S. unilateralism, America’s traditional allies have stopped looking to him for leadership, no longer trust that this president will offer them much and are turning their backs on him.

That was evidenced most obviously this week by the decision of the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, not to attend the Group of 7 meeting that Trump wanted so badly in Washington this month to show that the virus was behind him and the world was returning to normal.

Merkel cited the lingering threat of the virus, but a senior German official who spoke on the condition of anonymity made clear that she had other reasons to decline: She believed that proper diplomatic preparations had not been made; she did not want to be part of an anti-China display; she opposed Trump’s idea of inviting the Russian president, Vladimir Putin; she did not want to be seen as interfering in U.S. domestic politics.

And she was shocked by Trump’s sudden, unilateral decision to pull out of the World Health Organization.

The divide between Trump and European allies was widening even before U.S. cities were convulsed by rioting. But the chaos on American streets, viewed from abroad, has only reinforced a sense that the conflicts that Trump seems to sow have caught up with him.

As Trump threatens to call in the military against his own citizens, he has become a president that some of America’s closest allies prefer to keep at arms’ length, unsure of what he will do next and unwilling to be dragged into his campaign for reelection.

“Leaders in allied nations now think that criticizing Trump is to their advantage,” said Marietje Schaake, a former Dutch European legislator, especially now with the unrest in U.S. cities and demonstrations supporting those protests in many European cities, including Amsterdam.

Even the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell Fontelles, felt bold enough Tuesday to say that Europe is ”shocked and appalled” by the police killing of George Floyd. He condemned an ”abuse of power” and “an excessive use of force” and urged the United States to act “in full respect of the law and human rights.”

On Monday, as if to underline the U.S. president’s isolation, it was to the Russian president, Putin, that Trump placed a call, in which the two men discussed the virus, trade and “progress toward convening the G-7,” the White House said.

Trump invited Putin to the meeting, according to the Kremlin. But if it happens at all, there are doubts that Putin would accept being invited solely as a guest, having been kicked out of the club for his annexation of Crimea and support for insurrection in eastern Ukraine.

Trump also called President Jair Bolsonaro, the hard-right leader of Brazil, on Monday.

“It all shows just how out of touch Trump is with allies,” said Julianne Smith, a former Obama official now with the German Marshall Fund in Washington. “This is a man isolated at home and abroad. He is trying to find friends in other places, knowing that relations with traditional allies are bad. But there are serious strains even with the authoritarians he admires, like Xi Jinping and even Putin.”

Trump “continues to believe allies can be abused and mistreated and that he can order them around and at the same time count on them,” Smith said. “He doesn’t understand that while the U.S. is powerful, it doesn’t always call the shots.”

Merkel’s refusal to come to Washington “says a lot about how fed up multiple leaders are around the world, who have seen how little return they’ve gotten on the investments they made into a relationship with Trump,” she said.

With the virus and the riots, she added, “now there is a sense of America’s weaknesses being exposed, and a feeling that the emperor has no clothes.”

The threads unraveled quickly. As late as Thursday, European and U.S. officials say, Trump’s plans for a Group of 7 summit meeting in Washington were being negotiated with member countries and looked likely to go ahead. Then, Friday, Trump suddenly announced that he was pulling the United States out of the WHO, more than two weeks before his own stated deadline for the decision.

As so often in the past, on issues like unilateral U.S. withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal or the Paris climate accord or the Open Skies treaty or the sudden ban on air travel from Europe, Trump ignored the views of allies or did not consult them at all.

The WHO decision was a surprise to allies, and Merkel quickly said that she would not attend the proposed summit meeting.

Since then, both Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada have come out publicly against bringing Russia back into the Group of 7.

“For the British and Canadians to say no publicly is highly unusual,” given their closeness to the United States, said Carl Bildt, the former Swedish prime minister.

As for Merkel, he said, given the lack of preparation, “the Germans suspected it was just a photo op with Trump in the White House.”

Despite allied concerns, the Group of 7 matters, and plans for the meeting were going ahead given a general desire to come up with strong positions on Hong Kong and to try to influence Washington’s policies on the virus, said Thomas Wright of the Brookings Institution.

But after the WHO announcement, Merkel decided that “if you’re going unilateral, I’m not going to be there to support you,” Wright said. “The allies all think he’s all over the place and they’ll try to avoid him.”

President Emmanuel Macron of France has a more traditional French view, especially toward building an improved relationship with Russia, despite Crimea, given its proximity to the European Union, said Thomas Gomart, director of the French Institute of International Relations.

“In France toward Trump is a mix of sadness and anger,” Gomart said. “Our main ally refused to exercise leadership during the corona crisis and is every day more provocative toward its allies and is creating divisions that are very actively exploited by China.”

After nearly four years, Trump has no diplomatic accomplishments, Gomart said, listing failures on North Korea, the Middle East, a deterioration of relations with China and no improvement of relations with Russia. Instead, Macron believes that Trump has damaged European security through his unilateral abandonment of the Iran nuclear deal as well as nearly every arms control agreement with Russia.

© 2020 The New York Times Company

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