The View From Europe

Published: April 18, 2018, 6:25 p.m.

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We are in a period of profound domestic turmoil here in the United States. I clearly don\'t need to run down the list of everything out of the ordinary that is happening in DC -- you know full well this is not normal.\\xa0
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But I am curious to learn how some of America\'s longstanding allies in Europe are interpreting this unique moment of US history and I was also curious to learn how diplomacy with the United States has changed over the last year and half since Trump took office.\\xa0\\xa0
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So, I could not think of anyone better to whom I should put some of these questions than Klaus Scharioth. He is a veteran German diplomat, having served in the ministry of foreign affairs since the 1970s. He was the German ambassador to the United States from 2006 to 2011, so spanning both the Bush and Obama administrations.\\xa0 He is now a professor of practice at the fletcher school at Tufts University. The Ambassador is also a member of the board of directors of Humanity in Action-Germany.\\xa0
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We kick off with a conversation about the ways in which the day-to-day practice of diplomacy with the United States has changed since Trump took office. We then have a wider discussion about the evolving nature of transatlantic relations and how the fundamental worldview of Europe is clashing with that of the Trump administration. I recorded the conversation a couple of days ago and one thing that has stuck with me about our conversation was the Ambassador\'s emphasizing that America\'s capacity for self-correction is among its most widely admired attributes in Europe.\\xa0\\xa0
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