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Macron says Europe facing ‘profound geopolitical rupture’ amid changes in world order – Europe live | World news

France’s Macron urges Europe to assert its position amid dramatic changes in world order with US, China relations

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, has urged Europe to reassert its position in the world, as the continent faces rapidally changing landscape in politics and trade.

In an interview with a group of European media outlets, Macron warned that the strategy of bowing down to the US and other geopolitical powers doesn’t work and urged Europe to urgently step up its integration to get ready to face “permanent instability” ahead.

“It is time for Europe to wake up … If we do not decide for ourselves, we will be swept away,” he told El País (€) and others, including Süddeutsche Zeitung (€), Financial Times (£), and Le Monde (€).

Macron said Europe was facing “a profound geopolitical rupture” with “a profound shock” on trade and defence as its relations with China and the US change.

“I think the best way is to reduce risk, reduce dependencies, and make decisions for ourselves instead of waiting for the next crisis,” he said.

“If we choose to be spectators, we will be vassals,” he said, calling it “the Greenland moment,” saying the US interest in a territory of its Nato ally should be a wake-up call for European leaders.

Macron said that Europeans “stand firm, but react too slowly,” and need to assert their position as a global superpower, with more “common leadership” on the continent.

He argued that the Franco-British-led Coalition of the Willing for Ukraine was an example of an initiative that allowed Europe to build a strong, international alliance to defend its interests, also in defence and security.

But in comments likely to raise some eyebrows, Macron also once again suggested that Europe should reopen diplomatic channels with Moscow, so to “not delegate this discussion” to others, including the US.

He said Europe should engage with Russia “without being naive or pressuring the Ukrainians, but also without having to depend on a third party” to conduct these talks.

“We have European interests to defend and I’m not going to delegate them to anyone, not even the US.”

Macron also spoke about what he saw as a real risk of tensions with the US flaring up again over the European push to regulate social media platforms or Greenland.

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German data authority tells citizens to weigh up risks of sharing extensive data with US authorities

Kate Connolly

in Berlin

Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection has warned citizens of Germany who wish to travel to the USA to weigh up in advance whether they are prepared to share the data requested by the US authorities in an adjustment to travel rules which includes handing over personal contact details and online activity information going back several years.

US Customs and Border Protection CBP sign, inscription and symbol in yellow background in Newark Liberty International Airport. Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images

Louisa Specht-Riemenschneider told local media in Germany she had “taken note of the adjustments to the ESTA program with concern.”

She said German citizens must, on an individual basis, “carefully consider for themselves whether they are prepared to provide US authorities with this level of data in order to enter the country.”

She warned that the tightening of rules would also make the process of deciding whether someone could enter the US more complex.

“This can lead to an increased susceptibility to errors in the ESTA process,” she said.

Numbers of those travelling from Germany to the US either for work or leisure, have dropped considerably over the past year, influenced in part by the high profile detentions of several Germans at the US border, for days, and sometimes for weeks, at a time.

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