Kallas avoids criticizing Trump's security strategy – Politico

Kallas avoids criticizing Trump's security strategy – Politico

Ukrinform
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas downplays the significance of the Trump administration's recent harsh assessment of Europe, even suggesting that some of its critical remarks may be true. 

Politico stated this in an article, an Ukrinform correspondent reports.

"Europe has been underestimating its own power toward Russia, for example," Kallas said while on a panel at the Doha Forum, a major gathering of diplomats, NGOs and other international leaders.

Her statement came against the backdrop of criticism of European governments by the Trump administration in its new National Security Strategy, which the White House released on Thursday, December 4.

The 33-page document argued that European countries face "civilizational erasure" in part due to their acceptance of migrants. It accused some European governments of unfairly censoring certain political parties — far right ones, for the most part. It also suggested Europeans were an obstacle in efforts to end the war in Ukraine.

Read also: Britain may hand GBP 8B of frozen Russian assets to Ukraine – media

The administration makes clear it still considers European countries important allies, but it also indicated it will try to boost far-right parties on the continent. The strategy document also had very little to say about Russia, which launched the Ukraine war and has made threatening moves against other European governments..

As Kallas noted, the document spoke about a "lack of self-confidence" in Europe's relationship with Russia.

"European allies enjoy a significant hard power advantage over Russia by almost every measure, save nuclear weapons. As a result of Russia's war in Ukraine, European relations with Russia are now deeply attenuated, and many Europeans regard Russia as an existential threat," the strategic document states.

The panel's moderator, CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour, asked if President Donald Trump and his aides now saw Europe as "the enemy."

"I didn't read it like this," Kallas insisted, stressing instead the elements of the Trump document that acknowledged the importance of the transatlantic relationship.

"The U.S. is still our biggest ally," Kallas said. "We haven't always seen eye-to-eye on different topics. But the overall principle is still there: We are the biggest allies, and we should stick together."

As reported, a European Commission spokesperson told Ukrinform that the EU and the US share joint responsibility for preserving peace in connection with the new US national security strategy.

Photo: Kaja Kallas / X

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