Biden underscores need to maintain Northern Ireland peace, will not
weigh in on UK-EU row
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[March 18, 2021] By
Andrea Shalal and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe
Biden said on Wednesday it was "critically important" to maintain
Northern Ireland's peace process, but a senior aide said the U.S.
government would not take sides in a UK-EU rift over movement of goods
to the British-ruled province.
As Biden held a virtual meeting with Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin
on St. Patrick's Day, he underscored his support for the 1998 Good
Friday peace agreement that ended decades of bloodshed in Northern
Ireland.
In a joint statement, the two called for a good faith implementation of
the peace accord and other international agreements designed to address
the unique circumstances on the island of Ireland.
"We strongly support that, and think it's critically important to be
maintained," Biden said. "The political and economic stability of
Northern Ireland is very much in the interest of all our people."
Biden and Martin also pledged to expand ties between the two close
allies, including on issues such as climate change, combating the
coronavirus pandemic, and cancer research.
Both men expressed the hope to meet in person soon.
Biden, who often speaks with pride of his Irish roots, said the White
House would be illuminated in green later Wednesday to "celebrate the
deep, deep affection" Americans had for Ireland. White House fountains
also ran green, continuing a tradition dating to former President Barack
Obama, whom Biden served as vice president.
"The key objective is of course to deepen our relationship," Martin told
MSNBC earlier. "In President Biden, we have the most Irish-American
president since John F. Kennedy, and his election was greeted with great
affection and warmth in Ireland."
The Irish leader thanked Biden for his "unwavering support" of the Good
Friday agreement, adding, "It has meant a lot. And it has mattered."
"With a new trading relationship now in place between the European Union
and the United Kingdom, and a protocol that protects peace and avoids a
hard border on this island, I want to move forward with a positive
relationship with the United Kingdom," Martin said. "That means standing
by what has been agreed and working together to make a success of it."
There have been disputes over the implementation of agreements put in
place as the UK exited the EU, including the Northern Ireland protocol,
which governs movement of goods into the province. According to the
withdrawal agreement, Northern Ireland remains in the EU single market
for goods, and so requires checks on goods arriving there from other
parts of the UK.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President Joe Biden participates in a bilateral videoconference
with Ireland's Prime Minister Micheal Martin in the Oval Office at
the White House in Washington, U.S., March 17, 2021. REUTERS/Leah
Millis
The Biden administration viewed the rift as a trade issue to be resolved between
Britain and the EU, and would not take sides, a senior administration official
said before the meeting.
The dispute has rekindled tensions in Ireland more than two decades after the
peace accord largely ended three decades of violence between mostly Protestant
unionists who want Northern Ireland to stay in the UK and mostly Roman Catholic
nationalists seeking to unite the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland.
This month, Northern Irish loyalist paramilitary groups said they were
temporarily withdrawing support for the 1998 peace agreement due to concerns
over the Brexit deal.
The groups said they believed Britain, Ireland and the EU had breached their
commitments to the peace deal.
Provisions in the EU-UK trade and cooperation agreements, and the Northern
Ireland protocol, should protect the gains of the peace agreement, the U.S.
official said, adding the "hope that both sides are able to return to the table
and discuss the implementation of the agreement."
Martin has said Ireland, an EU member, is counting on U.S. support to help
maintain political stability in Northern Ireland.
Biden stopped by a separate virtual meeting that Vice President Kamala Harris
had scheduled with Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster and deputy
First Minister Michelle O'Neill, the White House said in a statement.
The U.S. officials expressed their strong support for the peace agreement and
the Northern Ireland protocol, and encouraged the leaders to "continue working
together toward a forward-looking Northern Ireland with a prosperous economy
that reflects the identities and aspirations of all traditions."
The virtual meeting with Martin was the first bilateral event with Ireland
hosted by Biden, who attended a St. Patrick's Day Mass at his church in Delaware
before returning to Washington. Biden is expected to make a trip to Ireland as
soon as this summer.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Steve
Holland in Washington and Conor Humphries in Dublin; Editing by Peter Cooney,
Rosalba O'Brien and David Gregorio)
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