U.S. President Biden is not 'anti-British', White House official says
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[April 12, 2023]
By Steve Holland
BELFAST (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden is not anti-British and his
pride in his Irish roots does not preclude him from playing a supportive
role in Northern Ireland's peace process, a White House official said on
Wednesday.
Biden, who is fiercely proud of his Irish heritage, arrived in Belfast
late on Tuesday and will spend just over half a day in the province of
the United Kingdom before he travels south to the Irish Republic for
two-and-a-half days of meetings with officials and distant relatives.
His first trip to Northern Ireland as president comes at a delicate
time, as it celebrates the 25th anniversary of its peace deal but with
the devolved powersharing government - a key part of that agreement - in
a state of collapse.
"The track record of the president shows that he's not anti- British,"
Amanda Sloat, U.S. National Security Council Senior Director for Europe,
told reporters in Belfast.
"President Biden obviously is a very proud Irish American. He is proud
of those Irish roots. But he is also a strong supporter of our bilateral
partnership with the UK."
Sloat was responding to comments from Sammy Wilson, a lawmaker from the
Northern Ireland's largest pro-British party, the Democratic Unionist
Party (DUP), who told a newspaper on Wednesday that Biden was
"anti-British".
Former DUP leader and ex-Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster
also told the GB News channel on Tuesday that there was no doubt that
Biden "hates the United Kingdom".
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U.S. President Joe Biden meets British
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at the Grand Central Hotel, Belfast,
Northern Ireland April 12, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
BREXIT IMPASSE
The DUP have become one of the main focuses of the trip due to its
more than year-long boycott of the devolved government due to post-Brexit
trade rules that treat the province differently to the rest of the
UK.
Its leaders, along with leaders of the other four main political
parties in the province, were due to meet Biden on Wednesday
morning, with the DUP saying they will not be pressured into
changing their stance by the visit of a U.S. president.
Biden said on Tuesday that his priority was to help "keep the peace"
as Northern Ireland marks the anniversary of the 1998 Good Friday
Agreement that largely ended 30 years of bloodshed between mainly
Catholic opponents and mainly Protestant supporters of British rule.
Ties between the two communities - and between London and Washington
- have since been strained by Britain's departure from the European
Union and its need to secure a divorce deal that did not damage the
fundamentals of the peace deal.
Britain's relationship with the United States - built on close
defence, intelligence, economic and cultural ties - has long been
known as the "special relationship" but a failure to agree a free
trade deal after Brexit has disappointed some British politicians.
(Additional reporting by Sachin Ravikumar in London; writing by Kate
Holton; editing by Alex Richardson)
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