Chitchat 发啊! EU now view Ang Moh Trump USA as a Foe & Threat

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https://www.rt.com/news/375776-us-under-trump-threat-eu/


US under Trump among external threats to EU – council president Tusk


Published time: 31 Jan, 2017 12:25
Edited time: 31 Jan, 2017 14:27


European Council President Donald Tusk © Vincent Kessler / Reuters
European Council President Donald Tusk has called the US under President Donald Trump one of the external threats to the EU along with China, Russia and radical Islam.
The senior EU official added that the bloc must take “spectacular steps” to avoid disintegration. He said that if this did not happen, separated European nations would become dependent on the US, China and Russia.

Tusk said the EU could capitalize on Trump’s trade strategy to boost European economic ties around the world.


The remarks were made in the Estonian capital, Tallinn, where Tusk was meeting leaders of the three Baltic states. His speech mirrored an open letter to European leaders he had written earlier, ahead of a summit in Malta on Friday.

Tusk believes that the EU is currently facing a threat unprecedented since the since the signature of the Treaty of Rome in 1957, which founded the European Economic Community, EU’s predecessor.

“For the first time in our history, in an increasingly multipolar external world, so many are becoming openly anti-European, or Euroskeptic at best. Particularly the change in Washington puts the European Union in a difficult situation; with the new administration seeming to put into question the last 70 years of American foreign policy,” he said in the letter.

Tusk said that in addition to external threats, the EU has to deal with domestic nationalism, “national egoism,” a “decline of faith in political integration” and rising doubts about “the fundamental values of liberal democracy.”

Tusk warned against seeing any potential end of the EU as a positive development.

Read more
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande address the media at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany January 27, 2017. © Axel SchmidtHollande: Trump administration a 'challenge' for Europe
“The disintegration of the European Union will not lead to the restoration of some mythical, full sovereignty of its member states, but to their real and factual dependence on the great superpowers: the United States, Russia and China,” Tusk wrote to EU leaders. “Only together can we be fully independent.”

The European Council president suggested that the EU should borrow the American motto: “United we stand, divided we fall.” Variations of the phase have been used since antiquity, although its American roots date back to a pre-Revolutionary song by John Dickinson, one of the Founding Fathers.

While Tusk’s criticism of Trump is among the most vocal by EU officials since the Republican’s election, he is far from being alone. Earlier, Guy Verhofstadt, the EU’s chief negotiator on Brexit, said Trump and his chief strategist, Steve Bannon, are determined to break up the European Union.

Verhofstadt identified three major threats to the EU, with radical Islam and Russia being the first two.

“My impression is we have a third front undermining the EU, and that is Donald Trump, who ... has spoken very favorably that other countries will want to break away from the EU, and that he hoped for a disintegration of the EU,” he added.

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Europe already fell to the Islamic invaders, so not surprised.
 
Russian Television is part of Putin's weapon to destroy the West.
 
Europe already fell to the Islamic invaders, so not surprised.

The entire world of the West is already Fucking and Fighting one another among themselves, this is better than Osama Bin Laden became US president.
 
Anyone who uses RT as a credible news source needs their head examined.
 
After a round of Trump madness, Islam will rise big within USA, similar to Nigger from slaves to MLK n Obama.
 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4176344/We-not-pander-Trump-Donald-Tusk-tells-EU.html


'We must not pander to Trump,' Brussels chief Donald Tusk tells EU leaders as he takes swipe at Theresa May for sacrificing her 'dignity' for cosying up to US President

By Matt Dathan, Political Correspondent For Mailonline
15:09 GMT 31 Jan 2017, updated 15:28 GMT 31 Jan 2017

Donald Tusk issues rallying cry for remaining 27 EU member states to unite in face of controversial, anti-EU US President
Tells EU leaders to 'be proud that the union has created the best place on Earth'
But warns that challenges facing the EU are 'more dangerous than ever before'
EU chief Donald Tusk, pictured, issued a rallying cry for the remaining 27 EU member states to unite in order to face up to the controversial, publicly anti-EU US President +7
EU chief Donald Tusk, pictured, issued a rallying cry for the remaining 27 EU member states to unite in order to face up to the controversial, publicly anti-EU US President
European leaders were told today they must not 'pander' to the anti-EU Donald Trump and should instead boast that the Brussels union had made the continent 'the best place on Earth'.

EU chief Donald Tusk issued a rallying cry for the remaining 27 EU member states to unite in order to face up to the controversial, publicly anti-EU US President.

He said the challenges facing the EU were the 'more dangerous than ever before' since the Treaty of Rome 60 years ago, which effectively gave birth to the EU.

And appeared to criticise Theresa May for sacrificing her 'dignity' in deciding to strike up a close partnership with President Trump.

Mr Tusk, who as President of the European Council speaks on behalf of the EU heads of state, said Brexit would leave Britain dependent on global superpowers rather than restore 'mythical' sovereignty from Brussels.

Ahead of an EU summit in Malta later this week, Mr Tusk wrote to EU leaders to say they must 'have the courage to oppose the rhetoric of demagogues' calling for the 'disintegration' of the EU or face following Britain in returning to the 'real and factual dependence on the great superpowers: the United States, Russia and China'.
 
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...ss-suspected-iran-missile-launch/3481204.html

WORLD
UN Security Council due to discuss suspected Iran missile launch
Posted 31 Jan 2017 21:30 Updated 31 Jan 2017 22:11

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UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations Security Council scheduled "urgent consultations" for Tuesday to discuss what a U.S. official said was Iran's weekend test launch of a medium-range ballistic missile.

The consultations, called for by the U.S. government, are scheduled to be held after the Council's scheduled meeting on Syria.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said on Monday that Iran test-launched on Sunday a medium-range ballistic missile that exploded after travelling 630 miles (1,010 km).

Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif neither confirmed nor denied a missile launch. He added that Tehran would never use its ballistic missiles to attack another country and that its missile tests are not part of a nuclear accord with world powers or a U.N. Security Council resolution endorsing the deal.

That resolution, ratified in a July 2015 accord between Iran and six world powers under which it scaled back its nuclear program to defuse concerns it could be used to make atomic bombs, provided Tehran relief from crippling economic sanctions.

(Reporting by Ned Parker; Editing by Paul Simao)

- Reuters
 
People got missile and testing call people dangerous.

Angmoh got new missiles and testing it call marketing trying selling for millions to you when it is only worth $1000 scrap metal prices.

Angmoh phu I!!!
 
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/01/31/politics/european-union-trump/






European Union president trashes Trump as 'threat'
By Nicole Gaouette

Updated 2116 GMT (0516 HKT) January 31, 2017
EU leader warns of Trump threat


0:00



EU leader warns of Trump threat 01:32
(CNN)The European Union declared the Trump administration a "threat" on Tuesday, laying bare what many Europeans think privately and setting the stage for increased tension between the US and EU.

European Union President Donald Tusk's diplomatic bombshell listed the Trump administration as a threat alongside China, Russia, terrorism and radical Islam, adding that "worrying declarations by the new American administration all make our future highly unpredictable."
"The change in Washington puts the European Union in a difficult situation; with the new administration seeming to put into question the last 70 years of American foreign policy," Tusk said in a letter to EU members.
The astonishing break from diplomatic practice stems from reasons that range from the personal to the broadly geopolitical.
Tusk's stark description about a close ally of seven decades reflects deep unease about President Donald Trump's take on European institutions. He's called NATO "obsolete," dismissed the 28-member EU as a "vehicle for Germany" and publicly said he's had "a very bad experience" with the EU as a businessman.
There is concern that Trump's comments will not only undermine the EU, but benefit Russia, which would prefer a weakened NATO and a strained Europe-US alliance.
Bannon seen as most influential Trump adviser

Bannon seen as most influential Trump adviser 02:54
And then there is deep wariness about Trump's chief strategist Stephen Bannon -- not just because of his anti-EU views and influence on the President but because his website Breitbart News is looking to expand into Europe. Diplomats said there's concern the site's cocktail of fake news and conspiracies could impact upcoming European elections.
"Tusk's letter speaks to one challenge Europeans see -- Trump's skepticism," said Fran Burwell, a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council. "But there's another challenge in Bannon," who is close to populist European politicians such as France's Marion le Pen and her aunt Marine, leader of the National Front.
While some experts champion a move away from the EU and multilateral organizations, many diplomats and analysts said the new US administration seems to be trying to rewrite the terms of the US-EU alliance in ways that are potentially destabilizing.
Tusk's "dramatic language is something you wouldn't expect. It's extremely worrying, but I can see why. Trump's policies to the EU are completely unprecedented," said Stefan Lehne, a former EU diplomat from Austria now with Carnegie Europe. "Every Brit and European was socialized to expect the US to lead on every international crisis. Now you have a US president who wouldn't mind at all if the EU fell apart."
Populism: What next after Trump and Brexit?

Populism: What next after Trump and Brexit? 02:30
Lehne notes that Tusk's statement comes as the EU faces Russian assertiveness, a refugee crisis, rising populist movements in Europe, and critical elections in France, the Netherlands and possibly Italy.
"There's a lot at stake and all these negative dynamics amount to a crisis. Tusk seems to feel if all this comes together, if the EU doesn't come together, it will come apart. It is really a difficult moment."
Burwell describes it as "really earth shattering for many. It's a fundamental challenge."
Nile Gardiner of the Heritage Foundation agreed it's a "sea change," but sees it as a positive.
"The old arguments in favor of European integration no longer apply," he said. "The winds of change are sweeping through Europe with a drive toward sovereignty, self-determination, decentralization of power. Donald Tusk is in a state of denial as to the trajectory in which Europe is moving. President Trump has a better understanding."
Trump shows little love for the EU, saying at a Friday press conference with British Prime Minister Theresa May that he had a "very bad experience" in which "getting the approvals from Europe was very, very tough." Trump seemed to be referring to an EU ruling against a wall he wanted to build at an Irish golf course he owns because it would endanger protected snails.
Donald Trump and Theresa May: Another 'special relationship'?
Donald Trump and Theresa May: Another 'special relationship' with Britain?
The State Department referred requests for comment about Tusk's letter to the White House, which did not respond. The EU mission to the US said Tusk's letter speaks for itself.
In that letter inviting member states to a meeting on Friday, Tusk said, "We cannot surrender to those who want to weaken or invalidate the Transatlantic bond, without which global order and peace cannot survive. We should remind our American friends of their own motto: United we stand, divided we fall."
Derek Chollet, a senior adviser for security and defense at the German Marshall Fund, said a divided Europe and a weaker US-Europe relationship could make it harder for the US to find partners to work with -- particularly on global security issues -- there could be economic fallout that hurts US businesses, and it could leave Russia "empowered and getting everything it wants -- a US divided from Europe and an EU that is weakened and perhaps breaking apart -- without having to do anything. "
"To the extent that Trump seeks to undermine or weaken the EU, that benefits Russia," said Chollet. "This is a softball pitch over the plate to (Russian President) Vladimir Putin."
Gardiner, of the Heritage Foundation, said Russia would prefer to deal with a weak EU than individual countries. "Sovereign nations can do more than the lowest common denominator," Gardiner said.
Burwell added that one of May's messages for Trump was a request not to weaken the EU. "They are cooperating very strongly with Europe, the EU, in terms of sharing intelligence -- when she was Home Secretary she was central to that," said Burwell, "so the message was 'we're leaving but we still want them strong.' "
While the administration hasn't yet articulated a policy that would actively undermine the EU, Chollet said, "the fact that Trump has embraced people like Nigel Farage," the leader of the Brexit movement "who seeks to undermine the EU, and that advisers like Steve Bannon are on the rise, it's leaving Europeans asking questions whether the US is a reliable ally."
Who is Steve Bannon?

Who is Steve Bannon? 01:25
Several diplomats said anxiety is running high in Europe, with leaders quietly advising people to wait, avoid commenting on every Trump tweet, and see what the US actually does.
Lehne, the former EU diplomat, said that there might be a shift in tone coming. He pointed out that it's still so early in the Trump administration that the President doesn't yet have in place a full Cabinet that might reflect broader and less ideological views.
Leone said he was "quite sure" that former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson, the nominee for secretary of state, "has a different view of international cooperation than Mr. Trump himself. Trump will have to work with his Cabinet, Lehne said, "and he'll have to listen to them to some extent. What we've seen in this week is probably misleading because it expresses the views of a very small circle around him and not reflective of the larger group."
One reality check, analysts and diplomats said, might be the EU's strength as a trade bloc. It represents a market that is currently larger than the US and without the UK, will only be slightly smaller. Lehne said the economic underpinning of the EU makes it more resilient than some people realize, as transnational supply lines and free movement act as a powerful unifier.
And it may bring the US business community into the conversation on behalf of the EU, Burwell said.
"If you talk to US companies, the idea that the EU might break apart and you may have to deal with 28 different countries -- there's no way," she said. "If you don't think the EU is important, just ask these tech companies that look at Europe as a super regulator on issues they care about like privacy."
If Trump tries to make bilateral trade deals with member states, he'll run into a legal roadblock, said one diplomat, because trade negotiations have to be done through the EU capital in Brussels.
Going forward, Lehne said he thinks Trump may simply try to avoid dealing much with EU leaders like Tusk. "He's clearly going to talk to the capitals of the bigger states and if he runs into difficulties will try to play one off the other," Lehne said.
 
Trump hv great ideas turn America great with thousands of casinos. Why worry be happy with Trump.
 
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