European Union wants to move past Trump turmoil and challenge China together with Biden

Politics & Current Affairs

A paper by the European Commission, expected to be reviewed and possibly approved on December 10-11, proposes a U.S.-EU alliance to deal with challenges including China, the Financial Times reported.

U.S. and European Union flags are pictured during the visit of Vice President Mike Pence to the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium February 20, 2017. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir

A week ago, when U.S. President-elect Joe Biden announced his nominees for key foreign policy posts, we reported that the main takeaway for China policy was this: Increased competition through allies.

Europe is eager to partner with a Biden-led America, to face challenges including, and perhaps especially, China. The Financial Times reports:

The EU will call on the U.S. to seize a โ€œonce-in-a-generationโ€ opportunity to forge a new global alliance, in a detailed pitch to bury the tensions of the Trump era and meet the โ€œstrategic challengeโ€ posed by Chinaโ€ฆ

The paper, prepared by the European Commission, says the EU-US partnership needs โ€œmaintenance and renewalโ€ if the democratic world is to assert its interests against โ€œauthoritarian powersโ€ and โ€œclosed economies [that] exploit the openness our own societies depend on.โ€

This language also matches upย with that of Bidenโ€™s nominee for national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, who recently gave an interview with Politicoย and named his loftiest goal: โ€œto rally our allies to combat corruption and kleptocracy, and to hold systems of authoritarian capitalism accountable for greater transparency and participation in a rules-based system.โ€

The EU also reportedly wants to work with the U.S. on issues such as data regulation, the โ€œscreening of sensitive foreign investments,โ€ cyber security, the dissemination of COVID-19 vaccines, reform of the World Health Organization, and antitrust enforcement โ€” though this would be the most tricky issue, as large American tech companies are in the crosshairs of European regulators.

The EU paper is โ€œexpected to be submitted for endorsement by national leaders at a meeting on December 10-11,โ€ the FT says, setting the stage for an โ€œEU-US Summit in the first half of 2021.โ€

Everyone is ready to move past Trump

โ€œIโ€™ll be honest: European Union โ€” very, very difficult. The barriers they have up are terrible. Terrible. In many ways, worse than China,โ€ Trump said about a year ago.

  • The adversarial tone to some of Americaโ€™s closest allies across the Atlantic had been dutifully repeated by some of Trumpโ€™s longest-serving officials, including Commerce Secretary Wilbur Rossย and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer.
  • Secretary of State Mike Pompeo even reportedly spiked a joint G7 statementย earlier this year because other members refused to use the term โ€œWuhan virus.โ€

Republican Senator Jim Risch, chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is one of many prominent American politicians to call for more multilateral pressure on China since Trump lost reelection.

  • A report from the Republican majority of that committee, titled, โ€œA Concrete Agenda for Transatlantic Cooperation on China,โ€ says that the U.S. should โ€œwork with the EU to foster private-sector investments in the Indo-Pacific area, especially in infrastructure projects, and to ensure maritime security in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean,โ€ the SCMP reports.
  • When the report was released, the committeeโ€™s top Democrat, Senator Bob Menendez, tweeted, โ€œI welcome Chairman Rischโ€™s report on the importance of working with our partners on China.โ€

Even some Trump officialsย have apparently tired of โ€œAmerica Firstโ€ foreign policy. The Wall Street Journal reported last weekย that some senior officials want to โ€œcreate an informal alliance of Western nations to jointly retaliate when China uses its trading power to coerce countries.โ€

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