Angela Merkel pays what is likely to be her farewell White House visit Thursday ahead of her expected retirement this fall -- and will hand back the moral leadership of the West to an American President who actually believes in it.
She's hardly a touchy-feely politician. But President Barack Obama
was a favorite.
She was sniffy when the hope and change machine pitched up in Berlin for a campaign rally that drew more than 200,000 Germans. But later
he awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom
and she called him "Liebe Barack." Over a private dinner at the Adlon Hotel, close to the route of the old Berlin Wall in November 2016, Obama pleaded with Merkel
to run for another term,
seeing her as the guardian of liberal values Trump meant to destroy.
It's not all been plain sailing. The Obama team chafed at her fiscal dogma during the financial crisis. Washington still frets over her positioning on Russia and China. With Germany's historic burden in mind, she's refused entreaties by successive presidents to start splashing cash on defense.
But US President Joe Biden — like Merkel, one of the few Western leaders shaped by the Cold War —
will miss her
. Given President Emmanuel Macron's troubles in France and Britain's flight, Henry Kissinger's old question will be relevant again: "Who do I call if I want to speak to Europe?"
The neck rub that reverberated around the world. Bush eases tensions in Germany in July 2006.
The private dinner in Berlin in the wake of Trump's shock election win in November 2016 at which Obama urged Merkel to run again so she could save the global liberal order.
Who's in charge? Merkel and Trump go head-to-head in 2018 at the G7 summit in Canada.
'Unbelievably bad'
Speaking of George W. Bush, he's not happy.
The former President who sent US troops into Afghanistan is worried that Biden's plans to bring them all home will allow the Taliban to inflict "unspeakable" harm on Afghan women and girls.
Tens of thousands of Afghan civilians have been displaced as the Taliban, who follow a harsh brand of Sharia law, have taken control of nearly 200 districts — as US and NATO forces have been pulling back.