BSS
  21 Sep 2021, 09:05

EU rallies behind angry France in US row but Biden budges on travel

  UNITED NATIONS, United States, Sept 21, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Tensions rocked

the Western alliance Monday as European Union leaders backed France in its
anger over a scuppered mega-contract, but US President Joe Biden addressed a
key European grievance by easing Covid travel restrictions.

  The tensions in the transatlantic alliance overshadowed the beginning of
the UN General Assembly week, with Biden hoping to turn the page on the
turbulent presidency of Donald Trump and rally allies in the face of a rising
China.

  Biden, who will address the summit Tuesday, is also seeking to step up
action on fighting the pandemic and climate change, and forge global unity on
Afghanistan, where the Taliban swiftly took control after he withdrew US
troops last month.

  But tensions with France suddenly took center stage after Australia last
week canceled a multi-billion-dollar contract for French submarines, instead
opting for US nuclear-powered ones as part of a new three-way alliance with
Washington and London.

  European Council chief Charles Michel said the bloc would seek answers,
saying that allies needed to be sure of "transparency and trust."

  "We are observing a clear lack of transparency and loyalty," he told
reporters.

  With Trump, "at least it was really clear -- the tone, the substance, the
language -- it was very clear that the EU was not in his opinion a useful
partner, a useful ally," Michel said.

  European Union foreign ministers, meeting in New York, "expressed clear
solidarity with France," top EU diplomat Josep Borrell said.

  "This announcement ran counter to calls for greater cooperation with the
European Union in the Indo-Pacific," he said.

  French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has accused the United States of
betrayal and Australia of back-stabbing, and has no separate meeting
scheduled with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

  Le Drian called on Europeans to "think hard" about alliances, saying the
contract showed "the persistence of reflexes from a time we had hoped had
passed."

  US officials noted that Blinken will see Le Drian in a group setting
Wednesday during talks on Iran amid last-ditch efforts to salvage a 2015
nuclear accord.

  Asked about a bilateral meeting, senior State Department official Erica
Barks-Ruggles said that "the schedule will remain dynamic."

  Biden also plans to speak by telephone with French President Emmanuel
Macron, one of a number of leaders skipping the General Assembly due to Covid
precautions, on "the way forward," another official said.

  - Addressing European concerns -

  US officials said Blinken, a fluent French speaker who grew up in Paris,
sought to contain damage Friday in a conversation with France's ambassador in
Washington before the latter was recalled to Paris for consultations as a
protest.

  Officials said Blinken also passed along continued concerns by France and
other allies over a ban on European travelers imposed at the start of the
Covid-19 pandemic.

  In a significant reversal, the Biden administration announced it would ease
a Covid travel ban on all air passengers so long as they are fully vaccinated
and undergo testing and contact tracing.

  The European Union, eager to avoid a second summer without US tourists, had
relaxed its own rules months ago and had been threatening to reimpose them,
angry that the United States had not reciprocated.

  European powers including Germany -- which has been circumspect in its
remarks on the EU-France row -- hailed the shift on travel.

  Biden took office vowing to defeat the pandemic but has increasingly faced
political pressure as sections of the American public stubbornly refuse
vaccinations and as the Delta variant sends caseloads rising again.

  Biden will hold a special virtual summit Wednesday on ways to end the
pandemic, with the United States seeking to show a leadership role after
already donating more than 100 million Covid vaccine doses abroad.

  Barks-Ruggles said the summit is aimed at seeing how to "have greater
ambitions to get vaccines into arms quickly."

  Hoping to avoid the spread of Covid, New York authorities have asked that
all UN visitors be vaccinated.

  One person who defied the recommendation was Brazil's far-right president,
Jair Bolsonaro, who flew in despite his vaccine skepticism.

  On the eve of the summit, he was spotted eating pizza on a New York street,
apparently deprived from going inside because of the city's vaccination rules
for restaurants.