Biden warns Britain: Don't imperil Northern Irish peace
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[June 10, 2021] By
Steve Holland and Guy Faulconbridge
CARBIS BAY, England (Reuters) - U.S.
President Joe Biden will bring a grave Brexit warning to his first
meeting with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson: Prevent a row with
the European Union from imperilling the delicate peace in Northern
Ireland.
On his first trip abroad since taking office in January, Biden meets
Johnson on Thursday in the English seaside resort of Carbis Bay ahead of
a Friday-Sunday G7 summit, a NATO summit on Monday, a U.S.-EU summit on
Tuesday and a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva
the following day.
Biden will try to use the trip to burnish his multilateral credentials
after the tumult of Donald Trump's presidency, which left many U.S.
allies in Europe and Asia bewildered and some alienated.
Biden, though, has an uncomfortable message for Johnson, one of the
leaders of the 2016 Brexit campaign: Stop heated EU divorce negotiations
from undermining a 1998 U.S.-brokered peace deal known as the Good
Friday Agreement that ended three decades of bloodshed in Northern
Ireland.
"President Biden has been crystal clear about his rock-solid belief in
the Good Friday Agreement as the foundation for peaceful co-existence in
Northern Ireland," White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan
told reporters aboard Air Force One.
"Any steps that imperil it or undermine it would not be welcomed by the
United States," said Sullivan, who declined to characterise Johnson's
actions as imperilling the peace.
Britain's exit from the European Union strained the peace in Northern
Ireland to breaking point because the 27-nation bloc wants to protect
its markets, yet a border in the Irish Sea cuts off the British province
from the rest of the United Kingdom. Northern Ireland shares a border
with EU member Ireland.
Such is Biden's concern over Northern Ireland that Yael Lempert, the top
U.S. diplomat in Britain, issued London with a demarche - a formal
diplomatic reprimand - for "inflaming" tensions, the Times newspaper
reported.
Ireland hailed Biden's intervention while European Commision President
Ursula von der Leyen warned Johnson against taking any more unilateral
steps to undermine the Brexit deal.
TROUBLES
The 1998 peace deal largely brought an end to the "Troubles" - three
decades of conflict between Irish Catholic nationalist militants and
pro-British Protestant "loyalist" paramilitaries that killed 3,600
people.
Biden, who is proud of his Irish heritage, will make a statement of
principle about the importance of that peace deal, Sullivan said.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden disembark from
Air Force One after landing at RAF Mildenhall ahead of the G7
Summit, near Mildenhall, Britain June 9, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
"He’s not issuing threats or ultimatums, he’s going to simply convey his
deep-seated belief that we need to stand behind and protect this protocol,"
Sullivan said.
Although Britain formally left the EU in 2020, the two sides are still trading
threats over the Brexit deal after London unilaterally delayed the
implementation of the Northern Irish clauses of the deal.
The EU and Britain tried to solve the border riddle with the Northern Ireland
Protocol of the Brexit agreement, which keeps the province in both the United
Kingdom's customs territory and the EU's single market.
Pro-British unionists say the Brexit deal that Johnson signed contravenes the
1998 peace deal and London has said the protocol is unsustainable in its current
form after supplies of everyday goods to Northern Ireland were disrupted.
Britain, home to a large Airbus facility, and the European Union are hoping to
resolve a nearly 17-year old dispute with the United States over aircraft
subsidies to Boeing and Airbus.
U.S., British and EU officials have expressed optimism that a settlement can be
reached before July 11, when currently suspended tariffs will come back into
force on all sides.
One source close to the negotiations said the discussions were progressing well
but a deal was unlikely to be reached before the U.S.-EU summit next week.
Johnson, who wrote a biography of British wartime leader Winston Churchill, will
agree with Biden an "Atlantic Charter", modelled on the 1941 deal struck by
Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the prime minister's office said.
The two leaders will agree to a task force to look at resuming UK-U.S. travel as
soon as possible and also discuss how to provide COVID-19 vaccines to the
world's poorer nations.
Biden plans to buy and donate 500 million doses of the Pfizer coronavirus
vaccine to more than 90 countries, while calling on the world's democracies to
do their part to help end the deadly pandemic.
(Reporting by Steve Holland, Andrea Shalal, Padraic Halpin, John Chalmers;
Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Robert Birsel, Giles Elgood and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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