Kurz in Washington: Respect Earned in the White House

Published in Der Kurier
(Austria) on 20 February 2019
by Andreas Schwarz (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by William Hochstettler. Edited by Helaine Schweitzer.
Sebastian Kurz seems to contradict U.S. President Donald Trump on crucial issues.

Counting the seconds and minutes when two statesmen meet each other is part and parcel of what media and media advisers do in international politics. With that in mind, the handshake between Donald Trump and Sebastian Kurz was two shakes, and they were unusually short – the length not even being in the neighborhood of Emmanuel Macron's record (29 seconds). The Austrian chancellor's one-on-one conversation with the U.S. president was twice as long as had been planned, and the delegation talks were subsequently attended by Americans at the highest level. This suggests that the visit from Austria, the "a young guy; that’s pretty good," was taken very seriously.

And anyone who has seen Kurz in the follow-up “ZiB 2” interview on ORF must concede that it could hardly have been handled any more confidently.

The chancellor, who, in the run-up to the meeting conceded the fact that Trump had achieved clear foreign policy successes, apparently contradicted the president directly on important issues – from customs duties on European cars to gas from Russia. That is not something which is initially going to deter someone like Trump from the course of his “America First” policy one inch. But Kurz will have certainly gained respect from the American, who became aware of the young politician from Europe. Because it's not true that guys like the egomaniacal U.S. president only abide by cajolery.

First and foremost, the result of the meeting with Trump benefits the résumé of the Austrian chancellor himself. But it's possible that such a serious performance like this could perhaps also benefit Europe.


Das Zählen von Sekunden und Minuten, wenn zwei Staatsmänner einander treffen, gehört international zum Geschäft von Medien und Medienbetreuern in der Politik. Also: Der Handschlag zwischen Donald Trump und Sebastian Kurz waren zwei Handschläge, und die waren ungewöhnlich kurz – nicht annähernd in den Sphären des Rekords von Emmanuel Macron (29 Sekunden). Das Vier-Augen-Gespräch des österreichischen Kanzlers mit dem US-Präsidenten war dafür doppelt so lang wie gedacht, und die Delegationsgespräche anschließend von amerikanischer Seite höchstrangig besetzt. Das spricht dafür, dass der Besuch aus Österreich, der "junge Kerl, was gut ist" (© Donald Trump), sehr ernst genommen wurde.

Und wer Sebastian Kurz im Anschluss im ZiB 2-Interview des ORF gesehen hat, der muss konzedieren: Souveräner kann man es kaum machen.

Der Kanzler, der Trump im Vorfeld durchaus Erfolge in dessen Außenpolitik zugestanden hatte, hat dem Präsidenten in wichtigen Fragen offenbar deutlich widersprochen – von den Zöllen auf europäische Autos bis zum Gas aus Russland. Das wird einen wie Donald Trump zunächst keinen Zentimeter von seinem "America first"-Kurs abbringen. Aber Kurz wird sich bei dem Amerikaner, der auf den Jungpolitiker aus Europa aufmerksam geworden ist, durchaus Respekt verschafft haben. Denn es stimmt nicht, dass Typen wie der egomanische US-Präsident nur Liebedienerei ertragen.

Zuallererst nützt diese Bilanz des Treffens mit Trump der Vita des österreichischen Kanzlers selbst. Aber ein bisschen kann so ein ernst genommener Auftritt vielleicht auch Europa nutzen.
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