François Hollande has
led a series of damning attacks on Donald Trump by EU leaders arriving at a
summit in Malta to discuss the future of the union.
The French president
described recent comments by the US president as unacceptable and warned there
would be no future for Europe’s relations with the US “if this future isn’t
defined in common”.
The Austrian
chancellor, Christian Kern, said Trump’s ban on travellers from some
Muslim-majority countries was “highly problematic”.
Dalia Grybauskaitė,
the Lithuanian president, offered a withering verdict on the recent meeting
between Trump and Theresa May. “I don’t think there is a necessity for a
bridge. We communicate with the Americans on Twitter,” she said.
The British prime
minister, with the UK’s recently appointed permanent representative to the EU,
Sir Tim Barrow, by her side, was one of the few leaders not to comment as she
entered through the door of the Grand Masters Palace, where the 28 member
states are holding talks.
Hollande was scornful
of Trump’s first days in the Oval office, and warned him to stay out of the
EU’s internal affairs. “It cannot be accepted that there is, through a certain
number of statements by the president of the United States, pressure on what
Europe ought to be or what it should not be,” he said.
On Thursday the
Guardian revealed that leaders of the parties in the European parliament were
seeking to block the expected appointment of Ted Malloch as the US ambassador
to the EU following his claim that he intended to “tame” the union.
Asked what he thought
of EU leaders, like those of Hungary and Poland, who were leaning towards
Trump, Hollande said: “Those who want to forge bilateral ties with the US are
of course well understood by the public.
“But they must
understand that there is no future with Trump if it is not a common position.
What matters is solidarity at the EU level. We must not imagine some sort of
external protection. It exists through the Atlantic alliance, but it cannot be
the only possible route, because who knows what the US president really wants,
particularly in relation to the Atlantic alliance and burden-sharing?
“We in France have a
defence policy. We fear nothing … We must have a European conception of our
future. If not, there will be – in my opinion – no Europe and not necessarily
any way for each of the countries to be able to exert an influence in the
world.”
The European
commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, said he did not feel “threatened” by
Trump, but voiced his concern that the US administration was not on top of
world affairs. “There is room for explanations because of the impression that
the new administration does not know the EU in detail, but in the European
Union details matter,” he said.
Austria’s leader,
Kern, said of Trump’s decision to ban nationals from seven Muslim-majority
countries: “We should win these countries as allies in the fight against
[radical] Islamism, not as adversaries, and we shouldn’t corner them.”
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