Brexit a great thing, EU will continue to break apart: Donald Trump
Wading into foreign affairs days
before his inauguration, President-elect Donald Trump said Britain's decision
to leave the European Union would "end up being a great thing" and
predicted the bloc would continue to break apart. The incoming president, in an
interview published on Sunday, said European countries are reacting to an
influx of immigrants that threaten each nation's identity. "People,
countries want their own identity and the UK wanted its own identity,"
Trump said in an interview with London's The Sunday Times and Bild,
a German newspaper.
"I believe others will
leave," he continued. "I do think keeping it together is not gonna be
as easy as a lot of people think. And I think this: if refugees keep pouring
into different parts of Europe...I think it's gonna be very hard to keep it
together, because people are angry about it." The comments largely echo
Trump's rhetoric during his presidential campaign. He helped rally white
working-class voters by railing against illegal immigration and vowing to build
a massive wall along the border with Mexico.
Trump indicated he was
indifferent to whether the EU stays together or not, a sharp break from the
Obama administration, which encouraged Great Britain to remain in the EU last
year. The vote injected instability across the region and triggered calls for
similar moves in France, Sweden and the Netherlands. It also weakened the
28-nation bloc's ability to push back against Russian aggression in Ukraine,
among other regional challenges. Trump
did not address Russia in the sections of the interview released Sunday. His
praise for Russian President Vladimir Putin has come under intense scrutiny
following reports that Russia interfered in the U.S. election to help him win. He
did criticize German Chancellor Angela Merkel's immigration policies. While
saying he had "great respect" for the German leader, Trump said
Merkel made a "catastrophic mistake" by welcoming an influx of
immigrants into her country. He indicated that a December attack at a German
Christmas market by a Tunisian was one effect of Merkel's policies. Trump also
took aim at another key western alliance in the interview.
He called the North American
Treaty Organization, commonly known as NATO, "obsolete because it wasn't
taking care of terror" and said member organizations aren't paying their
"fair share." "A lot of these countries aren't paying what
they're supposed to be paying, which I think is very unfair to the United
States," Trump said. "With that being said, NATO is very important to
me."
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