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  • Will Europe embrace President Obama like candidate Obama?

    San Luis Obispo Tribune
    March 29 2009


    Will Europe embrace President Obama like candidate Obama?

    By STEVEN THOMMA - McClatchy Newspapers

    They gave him their hearts when he visited last summer. Now, the
    question hanging over Europe is how much more they'll give Barack
    Obama as he returns for the first time as president of the United
    States.

    Obama leaves on Tuesday on a whirlwind eight-day tour. He remains
    enormously popular in Europe, and the throngs that greeted him last
    summer as a candidate are likely to grow. With first lady Michelle
    Obama along, Obama's debut on the world stage as president already is
    inspiring anticipation of the kind of rock-star reception that greeted
    John and Jackie Kennedy on their first trip as first couple to Europe
    in 1961.

    Yet Obama also heads into his first overseas trip with grand goals -
    looking to forge a coordinated global response to the Great Recession,
    hoping Europe will send more of its sons and daughters to help in an
    escalating war in Afghanistan, and seeking to restore international
    cooperation that he thinks suffered in the Bush years.

    That will be a tough sell. Publicly, European and world leaders will
    embrace Obama. But privately, they likely will say no to some of his
    requests, most notably sending combat troops to Afghanistan, or
    simply avoid the subject.

    "He remains a superstar in European public opinion," said Reginald
    Dale, a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
    a centrist research organization. Dale noted that Europeans have even
    more trust in Obama than Americans do, according to a recent poll by
    the Financial Times newspaper.

    "European leaders want to be seen next to Obama, preferably with
    . . . his arms around their shoulders and a big smile, because he's so
    popular in Europe. And nobody's going to try and raise awkward
    subjects with him."

    Perhaps, but those subjects will be unavoidable as Obama heads first
    to the United Kingdom, then on to France, Germany, the Czech Republic
    and Turkey.

    White House aides said Saturday that Obama is eager, as he heads
    overseas, to rescue the U.S. and world economy and press an
    international approach to Afghanistan, but also to "re-energize" the
    international alliances that have guided world affairs for more than
    half a century.

    He'll do that, he said, by taking a more collaborative style, and less
    of the "my-way-or-the-highway" approach critics say President George
    W. Bush embodied.

    "The president and America are going to listen in London as well as to
    lead," said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

    That will help Obama to "continue leading and strengthening our
    alliances, re-energizing our alliances," said Denis McDonough, the
    Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications.

    UNITED KINGDOM

    His first stop will be at the G-20, a group of 19 major economic
    powers, plus the European Union, meeting in London.

    Obama has already been pushing them for more government spending to
    stimulate the global economy, as he's doing at home. Many European
    countries, however, instead are emphasizing tougher regulation of the
    financial system.

    "Even the European Union itself is balking," said Nile Gardiner, a
    scholar at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research
    organization. "I think we are going to see a significant transatlantic
    divide emerging at the G-20 between the U.S. position of massive
    stimulus spending and European opposition to that."

    Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek of the Czech Republic, the current EU
    president, this week ripped Obama's free spending approach as a "road
    to hell." But his own opposition party pushes for stimulus spending,
    and last week passed a vote of no confidence in his government.

    While in London, Obama also will have a chance to remedy his perceived
    missteps when he hosted British Prime Minister Gordon Brown in
    Washington. In one, Obama gave Brown a set of DVDs, ridiculed as a
    cheap slight by the British press.

    White House aides declined Saturday to say what Obama would have with
    him when he meets Queen Elizabeth II.

    FRANCE and GERMANY

    Obama next will attend a meeting of the NATO alliance in Strasbourg,
    France, and Baden-Baden, Germany.

    Officially, the meeting will mark the 60th anniversary of the
    alliance. Unofficially, the war in Afghanistan will dominate the
    meeting as the U.S. asks for help.

    "President Obama will probably not have much luck in obtaining
    additional combat forces," said Stephen Flanagan, a scholar at the
    Center for Strategic and International Studies. "There just isn't the
    willingness on the part of most of the European allies to do that
    right now."

    Americans already make up more than half of the international forces
    in Afghanistan. Obama announced on Friday that the U.S. would send
    another 4,000 troops to help train Afghan forces, atop the 17,500
    additional combat troops he already committed. When all are present,
    U.S. forces will total about 60,000 of the approximately 92,000 NATO
    troops there.

    "American expectations are being lowered, or Europeans are trying to
    lower American expectations," Flanagan said. "There may be some modest
    additions, but it's more likely that European governments will be
    offering trainers for both the Afghan national army and the Afghan
    police."

    CZECH REPUBLIC

    In Prague, Obama will attend a meeting of the EU.

    There, Obama will give what aides called a major speech on
    proliferation, including not just the threats from nuclear weapons but
    also cyber threats and energy security.

    Another likely topic will be the U.S. commitment to deploy a missile
    defense system in the Czech Republic, as the Bush administration
    proposed.

    Ostensibly aimed at protecting against missile launches from Iran, the
    system also is seen as a defense against Russia - but Moscow sees it
    as an insult and a threat.

    "If Obama withdraws on missile defense, which he seems to be doing,
    then he is going to leave the Czech and Polish governments out there
    hanging in the wind," said Dale of the center. "They went to great
    lengths to reach agreement on . . . basing those facilities there,
    even though their public opinions were largely against it."

    One possible result: remain vaguely committed to the missile defense
    while continuing a review of the policy. The challenge: doing it in a
    way that assures the Czechs and Poles they're not being strung along
    and convincing the world that the Obama administration isn't caving to
    pressure from Russia.

    Obama will visit Ankara and Istanbul before turning homeward.

    In Istanbul, Obama will hold a roundtable talk with students that will
    use new media such as the Internet to interact with young people
    across Europe and in Southwest Asia.

    "We have a very good story to tell about this country and our
    interests," said Michael Froman, the Deputy National Security Advisor
    for International Economic Affairs.

    Though this isn't the site of Obama's promised speech reaching out to
    the Muslim world - that will come later in a still-unidentified Muslim
    capital - Turkey is a Muslim country, and Obama's talk likely will
    strive to reach that audience.

    "Obama will start with a great advantage when he gets to Turkey,
    because his name is not George Bush. He was extremely unpopular in
    Turkey, as well as in the Islamic world," said Bulent Aliriza, the
    director of the Turkey Project at the center.

    "There's a sense of goodwill towards the U.S. and particularly towards
    President Obama . . . the entire Islamic world will be watching the
    speech he will be making at the Turkish Grand National Assembly in
    Ankara."

    Also, Obama will be pressed to speak out on whether Turkey committed
    genocide against Armenians from 1915 to 1923. Armenians want the
    recognition; Turkey maintains the dead were victims of war, not
    genocide.

    As a candidate, Obama promised the recognition as he appealed for
    Armenian-American support. But as president, he needs Turkish support,
    for the war in Afghanistan and other issues.

    The Turkish government doesn't expect Obama to risk a diplomatic
    incident by using the word "genocide." After visiting with White House
    officials recently, Ahmet Davutoglu, the top foreign policy adviser to
    the Czech prime minister, said, "we don't anticipate anything
    negative."

    WHAT'S THE G-20?

    It's 19 countries - Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China,
    France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi
    Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, Britain and the U.S. - plus
    the EU.

    How big is it?

    It represents two thirds of the world's population, and 90 percent of
    the world's total economy as measured by gross national product.

    Who's not represented?

    Among the countries in other economic meetings but not in the G-20:
    Belgium, Chile, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Malaysia, Morocco, the
    Netherlands, Poland, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and
    Thailand.

    http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/p olitics/story/666466.html
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