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EUROPEAN UNION

US urges EU and UK to ‘divorce amicably’

US Secretary of State John Kerry expressed regret Sunday that Britain has chosen to leave the European Union and vowed Washington will maintain close ties with the bloc.

US urges EU and UK to 'divorce amicably'
Kerry said the ideal of unity must remain paramount as Britain negotiates "Brexit". Photo: AFP

Kerry, who flies to Brussels and London on Monday for crisis talks with EU and British leaders, said the ideal of unity must remain paramount as Britain negotiates “Brexit”.

“An EU united and strong is our preference for a partner to be able to work on the important issues that face us today,” Kerry told reporters during a visit to Rome.

“One country has made a decision, obviously it's a decision that the United States had hoped would go the other way,” he said, alongside Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni.

“The vote about Brexit and the changes that are now being thought through have to be thought through in the context of the interests and values that bind us together with the EU.”

Gentiloni said Brexit demonstrated the need for the EU to change.

“We are working to relaunch the Union in light of the decision by the British electorate.

“Our historic friendship with Britain and our alliance through NATO are not up for discussion.

“The challenge we have before us is to translate a crisis into an opportunity by turning a difficult moment into the occasion to relaunch the EU.”

Washington was dismayed last week when British voters chose to leave Europe, a decision that triggered global economic uncertainty and fears other EU members will follow suit.

But Kerry said he had no doubt that Europe would pull together and reassure the markets, noting that even without Britain the EU single market counts 455 million consumers.

President Barack Obama had also made clear his concern about the referendum, and now US officials are scrambling to try to stop the political crisis harming Western unity.

Kerry arrived in Rome on Sunday on a planned visit to have lunch with Gentiloni and a working dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

But officials on his flight said that on Monday he would fly on to EU headquarters in Brussels to meet EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.

Mogherini had been expected to meet Kerry in Rome on Sunday, but she was busy dealing with the fallout of the dramatic vote, which stunned European and world leaders.

From Brussels, Kerry will continue to London to see Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond and other officials from outgoing British Prime Minister David Cameron's government.

Hammond and Kerry are expected to hold a joint news conference before Kerry leaves to return to Washington.

Obama and Kerry have been at pains to insist the vaunted “special relationship” between Washington and London will survive what US officials view as the Brexit debacle.

But Washington foreign policy experts are all but unanimous in assessing that the White House will increasingly turn to core EU allies to defend its interests on the continent.

Obama himself, on a visit to London last month, warned British voters that their nation would go “to the back of the queue” for a US trade deal if they voted “out.”

US officials are also keen to help London's divorce from Brussels go through smoothly without inflicting further damage on skittish world financial markets.

But they, like many EU capitals, are also concerned not to allow Brexit to serve as an inspiration for eurosceptic forces in other members such as Italy or The Netherlands.

The London visit will be the first by a senior US official since Thursday's dramatic referendum, when voters demanded Britain leave the world's richest trading bloc.

Kerry's trip had originally been planned as an opportunity to meet Netanyahu and discuss regional security and the stalled Israel-Palestinian peace process.

But US officials played down the chance of any concrete progress, insisting that the pair meet regularly and that no new initiative would be on the table.

POLITICS

‘The acceptable extreme’: Italy’s PM paves way for far right in EU elections

Having fostered pragmatic relations with Brussels, Italy's Giorgia Meloni is for many the "moderate" face of Europe's radical right - and is leading the charge for June elections.

'The acceptable extreme': Italy's PM paves way for far right in EU elections

The ascent to power of Meloni’s post-fascist, eurosceptic Brothers of Italy in 2022 sent shockwaves through the European Union, sparking fears of a lurch to the right within a founding member of both the bloc and NATO.

But her strong support for Ukraine has won Meloni friends in Washington and Brussels, particularly after she helped persuade Hungary’s Viktor Orban – a long-time ally sympathetic to Moscow – to drop his veto of EU aid to Kyiv.

Meloni has also worked closely with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, particularly on migration, a priority for the far-right premier.

“At a European level, she’s trying to present herself as a sort of moderate conservative and mediator” with the rest of the radical right, noted Lorenzo Castellani, a political analyst at Rome’s LUISS University.

READ ALSO: Not so radical: Italy’s Meloni marks one year in power

At home, Meloni has pursued a nationalist populist agenda focused on traditional family values, law and order, and migration, including a clampdown on rescue ships operating in the central Mediterranean.

It has raised hackles among the Italian left – particularly moves to exert influence over the RAI public state broadcaster – but nothing yet to spark alarm in Brussels, as with judicial reforms in Hungary and Poland.

Fiscal policy meanwhile has been relatively prudent, reflecting the constraints of being part of the EU’s single currency.

“She wants to be in many aspects the acceptable extreme for the rest of the European political establishment,” Castellani told AFP.

“She’s like the last island before the border.”

Embracing Meloni

Meloni heads the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group in the European Parliament, which includes Spain’s Vox, Poland’s populist Law and Justice (PiS), and France’s Reconquete!.

Marked by a pro-Ukraine, pro-NATO stance, it is viewed as more credible by the Brussels establishment than the other far-right grouping, the eurosceptic Identity and Democracy group (ID).

ID includes Marine Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) in France, Germany’s anti-immigrant AfD and Meloni’s own coalition ally, Matteo Salvini’s far-right League.

Rosa Balfour, director of the Carnegie Europe think tank, says both Rome and Brussels have benefited from a pragmatic working relationship.

“What the Commission has been doing is embrace Meloni and isolate Orban”, who is not part of either grouping, she told AFP.

“And that’s worked very well for Italy because Meloni has managed to extract concessions.”

This has mainly entailed EU support for the premier’s efforts to stop the tens of thousands of migrants who land on Italy’s shores each year on boats from North Africa.

Von der Leyen joined Meloni on the island of Lampedusa last year after a surge in arrivals, and the two women joined EU delegations to Egypt and Tunisia in recent months to agree new deals on energy and migration.

Meloni has announced her intention to run in EU elections in June despite not being able to take up office. Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP.

Game of alliances

Analysts say the shift to a tougher EU approach on migration was well underway before Meloni arrived – but that has not stopped her claiming credit.

“We want Italy to be central to changing what doesn’t work in Europe,” she said during her election campaign launch last month.

She is standing in the vote – despite an EU rule barring government ministers from taking up their seats – and urged the European right to follow her example.

READ ALSO: Italian PM Meloni to stand in EU Parliament elections

“We want to do in Europe exactly what we did in Italy on September 25, 2022,” she said.

But Castellani calls this a “bluff”.

“The real game she’s playing is trying to enter within the European game of alliances,” he said, notably building bridges between the ECR and Von der Leyen’s conservative European People’s Party (EPP).

The divisions in the European right are echoed within Meloni’s coalition, notably between her and Salvini – they share similar domestic priorities but differ on foreign affairs.

Salvini’s League has a history of warm ties with Moscow, while he never misses an opportunity to criticise Brussels.

But he has been eclipsed. The League came top in 2019 European elections in Italy with 34 percent, but is now polling closer to eight percent, compared to more than 27 percent for Meloni’s Brothers of Italy.

Shifting landscape

Surveys show voters are supportive of Meloni’s foreign policy – and less so of her migration efforts – but Lorenzo Pregliasco, founder of polling company YouTrend, says personality plays a big role.

Meloni is also seen as “more credible” than other Italian leaders, a skilled communicator and a “genuine figure, someone who says what she thinks”, he told AFP.

He notes her 2022 victory was driven by her image as a fresh face, the only party leader who did not join Mario Draghi’s technocratic government.

With the opposition still divided, as they were back then, he predicts she could stay in power for the full five-year term.

But by then the political landscape may be very different, not least if Donald Trump wins the November US presidential election.

Balfour suggests Meloni may have to reposition herself.

If Trump wins, “then you’ve got all the political leaders elbowing each other to lead the right. And Orban has already positioned himself there”.

By AFP’s Alice Ritchie.

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