Mark Carney tells Armenia summit Europe isn't destined to 'submit' to a more brutal world
by Andrew Walsh, https://www.thejournal.ie/author/andrew-walsh/ · TheJournal.ieLAST UPDATE | 10 hrs ago
EUROPEAN LEADERS HAVE talked up independence on defence and closer ties with Canada today, as they are gathered in Armenia for a summit clouded by US threats to cut military support.
US President Donald Trump loomed large over the meeting of the European Political Community (EPC) in Yerevan, which was for the first time attended by a non-European leader: Canada’s Mark Carney.
“We don’t think that we’re destined to submit to a more transactional insular and brutal world and gatherings such as these point to a better way forward,” the Canadian prime minister told fellow leaders.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin is also in attendance at the summit.
Ahead of today’s meeting he said that the forum will allow the challenges facing the European continent to be discussed, “including those linked to continuing Russian aggression in Ukraine, global instability and the consequences of conflict in the Middle East.”
Trump’s go-it-alone policies on trade and defence have pushed Canada and Europe closer together, with both now confronting the economic fallout from the US-Israeli war on Iran which has further strained transatlantic ties.
The Armenia gathering comes days after Washington announced it would pull 5,000 US troops from Germany, whose leader, Chancellor Friedrich Merz, has sparred with Trump over the Middle East conflict.
“We have to step up our military capabilities to be able to defend and protect ourselves,” EU chief Ursula von der Leyen told reporters in Yerevan. The bloc needed “more independence” in security matters, she added.
Like Europe, Canada’s economy has been hurt by Trump’s tariffs – but Carney has remained defiant, emerging as something of a figurehead for countries looking to stand up to the Republican president.
He has urged middle powers to join forces in the face of a new reality defined by great power competition and a “fading” rules‑based order.
Moving to diversify away from its southern neighbour, Ottawa has become the first non-European country to join the EU’s defence financing scheme, while seeking to increase cooperation on trade.
“We’re the most European of non-European countries, so there’s many ways that we can work together,” Carney told reporters in Yerevan.
“Great to count on friends like Canada!” European Council President Antonio Costa wrote on social media.
A biannual political forum, the EPC was established on the initiative of French President Emmanuel Macron in 2022 in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
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It was “initially perceived as an anti-Putin club” but Canada’s participation has given it a new “anti-Trump slant”, said Sebastien Maillard, a special adviser at the Jacques Delors Institute, a think tank.
’Stepping up’
Trump’s threats to reduce the US military presence on the continent have reinforced calls for Europe to do more for its own security, as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine grinds into a fifth year.
“This summer will be a moment when Putin decides what to do next, expand the war or move to diplomacy, and we must push him toward diplomacy,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told the gathering, calling for more sanctions on Moscow.
NATO chief Mark Rutte today admitted there had “been some disappointment on the US side” over Europe’s reluctance to get behind the Iran war.
But Europeans had “heard the message”, were now providing logistical support to US operations and pre-positioning “key assets close to theatre, for the next phase”, Rutte told reporters.
“Europeans are taking their destiny into their own hands, increasing their defence and security spending, and building their own common solutions,” echoed France’s Macron.
The EPC brings together the members of the European Union and, this time, 21 other countries, from Albania to the UK.
EPC summits do not normally produce concrete decisions but offer the opportunity for leaders to exchange in groups and bilaterally.
Ireland to host EPC summit in November
While in Yerevan, Martin is due to take part in a roundtable on economic security and connectivity, attend a session on support for Moldova, and join talks on tackling organised crime and drug trafficking.
He is also expected to hold a number of bilateral meetings with other leaders.
The summit comes amid uncertainty in transatlantic relations, with US President Donald Trump looming large over discussions following tensions with European allies and policy disagreements over global conflicts.
Established in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the EPC brings together EU and non-EU countries for informal political dialogue, rather than formal decision-making.
Ireland is set to host the next meeting of the forum in Dublin in November, with Martin expected to extend invitations to fellow leaders during today’s summit.
“I look forward to welcoming members of the European Political Community to Dublin,” Martin said today.
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