Macron warns of renewed US clashes as he urges EU to use ‘Greenland moment’ to push reforms

US President Donald Trump holds a bilateral meeting with France's President Emmanuel Macron on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, US. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 1 min 1 sec ago
Follow

Macron warns of renewed US clashes as he urges EU to use ‘Greenland moment’ to push reforms

  • Macron ‍said the Trump ‍administration was being “openly anti-European” and seeking the EU’s “dismemberment”

PARIS: Europe should brace for more moments of U.S. hostility, French President Emmanuel Macron has warned, and should treat what he called the “Greenland moment” as a wake-up call to push through long-delayed reforms to strengthen the bloc’s global power.
In an interview with several European newspapers, the French leader said the European Union should not mistake a lull in tensions with Washington for a lasting shift despite a pause in U.S. threats over Greenland, trade and technology.
Macron urged EU leaders ‌to use ‌a summit in a Belgian castle this week to ‌inject ⁠fresh ​energy into ‌economic reforms to bolster the bloc's competitiveness and strengthen its ability to stand up to China and the United States on the world stage.
“When there’s a clear act of aggression, I think what we should do isn’t bow down or try to reach a settlement," Macron told Le Monde, the Financial Times and other newspapers in comments published on Tuesday. "We’ve tried that strategy for months. It’s not working,”
Macron said the Trump administration ⁠was being "openly anti-European" and seeking the EU’s "dismemberment". He said he anticipated further tensions with the Trump administration, including over ‌Europe's regulation of digital technology.
"The U.S. will, in ‍the coming months — that’s certain — attack us ‍over digital regulation," Macron added, warning of potential U.S. import tariffs from U.S. ‍President Donald Trump should the EU use its Digital Services Act to control tech companies.

'EUROPE NEEDS PROTECTION, NOT PROTECTIONISM'
Europe needed to be more resilient in the face of a double challenge from the United States and China, Macron said.
"We have the Chinese tsunami on ​the trade front, and we have minute-by-minute instability on the American side. These two crises amount to a profound shock — a rupture for Europeans," ⁠he continued.
Macron, whose second term finishes in spring 2027, renewed his call for the EU to embark on more common borrowing to help the bloc of 27 nations invest at scale and challenge the hegemony of the U.S. dollar.
The EU used joint debt in 2020 to re-boot the European economy after the COVID-19 pandemic, but French attempts to make such tools permanent have faced stiff resistance from Germany and other more frugal northern member states.
Thursday's summit will include discussions around French-led plans for a “Made in Europe” strategy that would set minimum requirements for European content in locally manufactured goods. The approach has split EU countries and alarmed automakers.
"For me, the economic strategy to make ‌our Europe a power lies in what I call protection, which is not protectionism, but rather European preference," Macron said.


Philippine lawmakers set to vote on Marcos impeachment

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Philippine lawmakers set to vote on Marcos impeachment

MANILA: Philippine lawmakers were set to vote on Tuesday ​on whether to impeach President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who is accused of violating the constitution, graft and corruption, and betraying the ‌public's trust.
Impeaching ‌Marcos ⁠would ​need ‌a one-third vote in favour among the lower house of parliament's more than 300 members.
The House justice committee ⁠last week found two impeachment complaints ‌as lacking in ‍substance.
Complaints ‍against Marcos included ‍his decision to allow his predecessor Rodrigo Duterte to be arrested and taken to ​The Hague.
Marcos was also accused of abusing ⁠his power in spending public funds that led to a corruption scandal involving flood-control projects.
His alleged drug use, which he has denied, also made him unfit to run the country, ‌according to one of the complaints.