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Macron warns about renewed friction between US and EU, urges EU use "Greenland moment" to push reforms

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, warned that Europe must prepare for more episodes of U.S. hostility and should use the "Greenland Moment" to push through long-delayed reforms in order to increase the global power of the EU.

In an interview given to several European newspapers by the French president, he said that the European Union shouldn't mistake a lull between tensions and Washington as a permanent shift, despite the pause in U.S. threat over Greenland.

Macron called on EU leaders to take advantage of a summit this week in a castle in Belgium to inject new energy into economic reforms. This would boost the bloc's competitiveness, and increase its ability to compete with China and the United States.

In comments published in newspapers on Tuesday, Macron said: "When there is a clear act of aggression, we shouldn't try to settle or bow down." "We have tried this strategy for many months. "It's not working,"

Macron claimed that the Trump administration is "openly anti European" and wants to "dismember" the EU. He said he expected further tensions between the Trump administration and Europe, especially over digital technology regulation.

Macron warned that the U.S. would attack the EU in the coming months if the EU used its Digital Services Act as a way to regulate tech companies.

"EUROPE NEEDS Protection, not protectionism"

Macron said that Europe must be more resilient to the double threat of the United States and China.

"We are experiencing minute-by-minute instabilities on the American front and the Chinese tsunami. "These two crises are a deep?shock - a rupture for Europeans," said he.

Macron, whose term ends in spring 2027 and whose second term will end at the end of his current mandate, has renewed his call to the EU for more common borrowing so that the 27-nation bloc can invest "at scale" and take on the dollar's hegemony.

The dollar is being viewed with increasing suspicion by the world markets. They are looking for alternatives. Macron added that Europe's democratic institutions are a great asset to investors, especially at a moment when the U.S. is "drifting from the rule of law".

In 2020, the EU used a joint debt to help re-boot Europe's economy following the COVID-19 pandemic. However, France has faced strong resistance from Germany and the other frugal northern members states.

The summit on Thursday will focus on?French plans for a Made in Europe strategy, which would establish minimum standards for European content in locally produced goods. This approach has divided EU countries and alarm automakers.

Macron stated that "for me, the economic strategies to make Europe a powerful force lies in what I called protection, which isn't protectionism but rather European preferences." (Reporting and additional reporting by Michel Rose, Editing by Lincoln Feast Richard Lough Alex Richardson).

(source: Reuters)