Barack Obama on G7 unity mission as US president looks to repair German ties

US president will aim to tackle anti-American sentiment sparked by US spying controversies and negotiate pacts on terrorism and global trade
Demonstrators wear masks of world leaders during an Oxfam protest in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, southern Germany on Saturday. Photograph: Markus Schreiber/AP

Sunday 7 June 2015 06.14 Barack
Barack Obama will aim to show unity on global challenges with western allies,
especially with the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, during a trip to the country amid enduring anti-Americanism there over US spying programs.

Obama and Merkel plan to open his visit with a public display of friendliness, delivering remarks about the US-German alliance before taking a walk through the picturesque alpine village of Krün to sample the Bavarian food and sights. Then the two plan to meet privately at the nearby site of the two-day summit of the Group of Seven leading industrial nations to coordinate their agenda before joining the leaders of Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan.

A response to Russia on the heels of violent clashes in eastern Ukraine is expected to dominate talks at the G7 meeting at the Schloss Elmau resort, a year after Russian president Vladimir Putin was ousted for his aggressive moves on the former Soviet state and Merkel took over as chairwoman of the group. Also high on the agenda are the global economy, terrorism and trade as Obama negotiates separate pacts across the Pacific and Atlantic.

Obama is closer to Merkel than most heads of state, although their relationship has been tested in the past couple of years, particularly after it emerged that the National Security Agency had tapped Merkel’s mobile phone.

The spying controversy has grown in recent weeks amid reports that Germany’s own Federal Intelligence Agency, better known by its German acronym BND, may have helped the US spy on European companies and officials as long ago as 2008. Merkel’s chief of staff oversees the agency, which is something the opposition Social Democrats – who are struggling in opinion polls – have used to put her office under pressure.

“While we tend to view a lot of the impact of the NSA revelations in Europe as subsided, they have not subsided in Germany,” said Heather Conley, the director of the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. “This issue is being used in multiple ways to increase, I think, anti-Americanism in Germanyand to weaken the chancellor.”

Germans also will be looking to future US relations beyond Obama’s presidency, with 2016 presidential hopeful Jeb Bush planning to kick off a six-day European trip with a speech in Berlin on Tuesday to the economic council of the Christian Democratic Union, the conservative party led by Merkel.

In their last meeting, in February at the White House, Obama called Merkel “my close friend and partner” and Merkel addressed him as “dear Barack”. Tensions over the spying programs have been acknowledged and they are still working to overcome them. “There are still different assessments on individual issues there, but if we look at the sheer dimension of the terrorist threat, we are more than aware of the fact that we need to work together very closely,” Merkel said.

Obama said there “was no doubt” the spying revelations damaged impressions of the US in Germany and that he had been trying to restore confidence. “Occasionally I would like the German people to give us the benefit of the doubt, given our history, as opposed to assuming the worst,” he said.

Julianne Smith, a former Obama White House official who is a senior fellow at the Center for New American Security, said part of the disillusionment in Germany and Europe more broadly came from their sky-high expectations of Obama when he came to office. Hundreds of thousands turned out in the streets to hear Obama speak during a visit to Berlin in his 2008 campaign.

“It’s been an interesting ride, and I think, frankly, everybody needs this summit,” she said. “They need the photo ops, they need to show the unity. They need it for their publics at home. They need it to send signals to President Putin that they’re united. And, frankly, they need it because they have to trade notes behind closed doors on what their next steps are on a lot of these global challenges.”

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