German Chancellor Merz welcomes Trump's Greenland U-turn, warns of new world being "built on force"
Davos [Switzerland], January 22 (ANI): German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Thursday welcomed US President Donald Trump's pledge not to use military force to take Greenland, while warning that Europe must strengthen its own ability to project power as global conditions become increasingly dangerous.
Merz described it as "good news" that Trump said he would drop the February 1 tariffs he had pledged to impose on European countries over Greenland. However, he warned that Washington was "radically reshaping" its foreign policy, a shift he said was unsettling the foundations of the international order.
Against this backdrop, Merz urged European countries to act quickly to boost defence spending and strengthen economic competitiveness in response to what he described as "tectonic" changes in the global order.
"Despite all the frustration and anger of recent months, let us not be too quick to write off the transatlantic partnership," Merz said, adding, "We Europeans, we Germans, know how precious the trust on which NATO is based is."
Merz also warned of the risks posed by a new era of great-power rivalry.
Setting out what he called a three-part strategy for Europe to assert itself, Merz said the continent must invest "massively" in defence, improve competitiveness and maintain unity.
"Europe's trade ambitions are crystal clear," Merz said, adding, "We want to be the alliance offering open markets and trade opportunities."
Europe, he said, "must be the antithesis to state-sponsored unfair trade practices, raw material protectionism, tech prohibition and arbitrary tariffs. Tariffs again have to be replaced by rules, and those rules need to be respected by trading partners".
He criticised the European Parliament's decision this week to send the accord for judicial review, warning that the move could delay the deal by up to two years and increase pressure on the European Commission to provisionally apply the agreement.
Next Story