Pence pledges America’s commitment to UN, NATO

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and United States Vice President Mike Pence arrive at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany on Saturday.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and United States Vice President Mike Pence arrive at the Munich Security Conference in Munich, Germany on Saturday.
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AP, Munich :
German Chancellor Angela Merkel appealed to the United States and others on Saturday to support and bolster multilateral organizations such as the European Union, the United Nations and NATO, an alliance to which U.S. Vice President Mike Pence pledged America’s commitment was “unwavering.”
Merkel told Pence and other world leaders, diplomats and defense officials at the Munich Security Conference that “acting together strengthens everyone.”
Her address came amid concern about the Trump administration’s approach to international affairs and fears that it may have little interest in working in multilateral forums.
“Will we be able to continue working well together, or will we all fall back into our individual roles?” Merkel asked. “I call on us, and I hope we will find a common position on this, let’s make the world better together and then things will get better for every single one of us.” Pence sought immediately to address concerns raised by President Donald Trump’s comments questioning whether NATO was “obsolete.”
Pence told the group: “I bring you this assurance: The United States of America strongly supports NATO and will be unwavering in our commitment to our transatlantic alliance.”
“Your struggles are our struggles. Your success is our success, Pence said. “And ultimately, we walk into the future together.” Merkel conceded room for improvement in multilateral structures, saying that in many places they are not efficient enough. “I am firmly convinced that it is worth fighting for our common international multilateral structures, but we must improve them in many places,” she said. Merkel reiterated that Germany is committed to the official NATO goal of putting 2 percent of gross domestic product into defense spending – Germany currently contributes 1.3 percent.
“We will do everything we can in order to fulfill this commitment,” she said. “But let me add, however, that I believe while NATO is very much in the European interest, it’s also in the American interest – it’s a very strong alliance where we are united together.”
Pence added bluntly that the U.S. expected that all NATO members would meet the 2 percent goal.
“Europe’s defense requires your commitment as much as ours,” he said.
Merkel said Europeans couldn’t fight Islamic extremist terrorism alone, and “we need the military power of the United States.” She renewed a call for Islamic religious authorities to speak “clear words on the demarcation of peaceful Islam and terrorism in the name of Islam.” Merkel pledged to continue working for better relations with Russia, but also stressed the importance of sticking to the 2015 agreement she helped broker in Minsk, Belarus aimed at ending fighting in eastern Ukraine between government forces and pro-Russian separatists.
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