Trump’s Appointees Might Have Collapsed Under Pressure But Trump Is
Still In The Fight
Trump’s Appointees Might Have Collapsed Under Pressure But Trump Is
Still In The Fight
Possibly this is fake news to portray Trump as a belligerent loose
cannon. He does seem
intent on dismantling the carefully constructed system that provides a handful
of oligarchs with all the power and wealth.
In Stunning Pair Of Interviews, Trump Slams NATO And EU, Threatens BMW
With Tax; Prepared To "Cut Ties" With Merkel
Jan 16, 2017 9:15 AM
In two separate, and quite striking, interviews with Germany's Bild (paywall) and London's Sunday
Times (paywall), Donald Trump did
what he failed to do in his first US press conference, and covered an extensive
amount of policy and strategy, much of which however will likely please neither
the pundits, nor the markets.
Among the numerous topics covered in the Bild interview, he called NATO
obsolete, predicted that other European Union members would join the U.K. in
leaving the bloc and threatened BMW with import duties over a planned plant in
Mexico, according to a Sunday interview granted to Germany’s Bild newspaper
that will raise concerns in Berlin over trans-Atlantic relations. Furthermore,
in his first "exclusive" interview in the UK granted to the Sunday
Times, Trump said he will offer Britain a quick and “fair” trade deal with
America within weeks of taking office to help make Brexit a “great thing”.
Trump revealed that he was inviting Theresa May to visit him “right after” he
gets into the White House and wants a trade agreement between the two countries
secured “very quickly”.
Trump told the Times that other countries would follow Britain’s lead in
leaving the European Union, claiming it had been deeply damaged by the
migration crisis. “I think it’s very tough,” he said. “People, countries want
their own identity and the UK wanted its own identity.”
Elsewhere, quoted in German from a conversation held in English, Trump
predicted Britain’s exit from the EU will be a success and portrayed the EU as
an instrument of German domination with the purpose of beating the U.S. in
international trade. For that reason, Trump said, he’s fairly indifferent
whether the EU breaks up or stays together, according to Bild. According to Bloomberg, Trump’s comments
"leave little doubt that he will stick to campaign positions and may in
some cases upend decades of U.S. foreign policy, putting him fundamentally at
odds with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on issues from free trade and
refugees to security and the EU’s role in the world."
Trump then attacked another carmarker, previosuly unnoticed by the
president-elect, when he warned the United States will impose a border
tax of 35 percent on cars that German carmaker BMW plans to build at a new
plant in Mexico and export to the U.S. market. A BMW spokeswoman said
a BMW Group plant in San Luis Potosi would build the BMW 3 Series starting from
2019, with the output intended for the world market. The plant in Mexico would
be an addition to existing 3 Series production facilities in Germany and China.
Trump said BMW should build its new car factory in the United States because
this would be "much better" for the company.
He went on to say Germany was a great car producer, borne out by
Mercedes Benz cars being a frequent sight in New York, but there was no
reciprocity. Germans were not buying Chevrolets at the same rate, he said,
making the business relationship an unfair one-way street. He said he was an
advocate of free trade, but not at any cost. The BMW spokeswoman said the
company was "very much at home in the U.S.," employing directly and
indirectly nearly 70,000 people in the country.
Going back to foreign policy, Trump discussed his stance on Russia and
suggested he might use economic sanctions imposed for Vladimir Putin’s
encroachment on Ukraine as leverage in nuclear-arms reduction talks, while
NATO, he said, “has problems.”
“[NATO] is obsolete, first because it was designed many, many years
ago,” Bild quoted Trump as saying about the trans-Atlantic military
alliance. “Secondly, countries aren’t paying what they should” and NATO
“didn’t deal with terrorism.”
While those comments expanded on doubts Trump raised about the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization during his campaign, he reserved some of his most
dismissive remarks for the EU and Merkel, whose open-border refugee policy he
called a “catastrophic mistake.” He further elaborated on this stance in the
Times interview, where he said he was willing to lift Russian sanctions in
return for a reduction in nuclear weapons.
When asked about the prospect of a nuclear arms reduction deal with
Russia, Trump told the newspaper in an interview: "For one thing, I think
nuclear weapons should be way down and reduced very substantially, that’s part
of it.”
Additionally, Trump said Brexit will turn out to be a "great
thing." Trump said he would work very hard to get a trade deal with
the United Kingdom "done quickly and done properly".
Trump praised Britons for voting last year to leave the EU. People and
countries want their own identity and don’t want outsiders to come in and
“destroy it.” The U.K. is smart to leave the bloc because the EU “is basically
a means to an end for Germany,” Bild cited Trump as saying. “If you ask me,
more countries will leave,” he was quoted as saying.
While Trump blamed Brexit on an influx of refugees he said that Britain
was forced to accept, the U.K.’s number of asylum applications in 2015 was a
fraction of the 890,000 refugees who arrived in Germany that year at the peak
of Europe’s migrant crisis.
With Merkel facing an unprecedented challenge from the anti-immigration
Alternative for Germany as she seeks a fourth term this fall, Trump was asked
whether he’d like to see her re-elected. He said he couldn’t say, adding that
while he respects Merkel, who’s been in office for 11 years, he doesn’t know
her and she has hurt Germany by letting “all these illegals” into the country.
Among Trump's other comments to Bild::
- the Bush
administration’s decision to invade Iraq may have been the worst in U.S.
history;
- that Jared
Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, is a natural talent who will bring about an
accord with Israel
- Trump plans to keep
using social media including Twitter once he’s in the White House to
sidestep the press and communicate directly with his followers
- People entering
the U.S. will face “extreme” security checks, possibly including some
European nationals
But perhaps the most troubling, if only to legacy US diplomatic
relations, was that, as the Times noted, "despite all of Mr Trump's
expressions of admiration for Mr Putin and Mrs Merkel, he revealed that he was
prepared to cut ties with both: "Well, I start off trusting both -
but let's see how long that lasts. It may not last long at all."
It is unclear if this litany of strategic and tactical announcements,
many of which quite shocking in their audacity and scope, is merely meant to
serve as a launching pad for further negotiations, something Trump has proven
quite adept at doing by stunning his counterparties into a state of abrupt
silence, or if these are actually meant to serve as a basis for future US
policy; if it is the latter, when US markets reopen they may have a distinct
case of indigestion because while the market had desperately hoped for more
clarity out of Trump on his policies, what emerged in these two interview is
hardly it.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.