Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Ramadan 17, 1445 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
23°C / 23°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Merkel says has developed ‘good relationship’ with Trump

997259
997259
minus
plus

BERLIN: German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Saturday that she and President Donald Trump have built a “good working relationship” even though the two had frosty exchanges last year that raised fears of damage to the pivotal US-German partnership.


“President Trump and I have developed a good working relationship, which doesn’t rule out having different points of view,” Merkel told the RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND) group of newspapers.


“When we talk with each other, for instance, it’s about developing a common strategy for the Ukraine conflict or the horrible war in Syria.


It’s also about the fight against terror or the disastrous humanitarian situation in Yemen — all these conflicts are at the doorstep of Europe.


“If we want to resolve these problems, if we want to help people, we need strong involvement from the United States,” Merkel said.


In his 2016 election campaign, Trump had disparaged Merkel for allowing more than a million refugees from Syria, the Middle East and Afghanistan into her country, saying she was “ruining Germany” with those policies.


He had also criticised Germany’s large trade surpluses and threatened to import duties.


After Trump won, Merkel congratulated him but pointed out importance of democracy and the need to respect people’s dignity regardless of their origin, colour of their skin, religion, gender, sexual orientation or political views.


Merkel’s relations with Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama got off to an awkward start when she rejected his request to speak at the Brandenburg Gate during the 2008 presidential campaign. But the two grew close, cooperating on sanctions against Russia and launching negotiations on a transatlantic free-trade deal.


Merkel met Trump for the first time in March — an encounter closely watched by governments around the world for clues about the transatlantic alliance that helped shape the post-war global order that Trump was threatening to upend.


Trump and Merkel shook hands when she arrived at the White House but did not do so in the Oval Office where she frequently leaned towards him while he stared straight ahead.


The two leaders’ differing views on trade, Russia and immigration led to some uncomfortable moments at a joint news conference which ended oddly with a quip by Trump about wiretapping that left Merkel visibly bewildered.


But Trump has since praised the chemistry he has developed with Merkel and the two have spoken regularly on the telephone.


She also invited Trump’s daughter Ivanka, an unpaid adviser to the president, to address a conference in Berlin.


“When I visited him in Washington, we talked about trade agreements,” Merkel said. “The US president is asking for fair conditions from his country’s point of view, and we’re naturally looking out for German and European interests.” — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon