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President Donald Trump affirmed US commitment to the defence of NATO allies on Thursday in a Warsaw (Poland) speech that gently criticised Russia, and said Western civilisation must stand up to “those who would subvert and destroy it”.
In his second trip to Europe as President and shortly before leaving for a potentially fractious G-20 meeting in Germany, Trump appeared at pains to soothe US allies after unnerving them in May by failing to endorse the principle of collective defence enshrined in Article Five of the NATO treaty.
As a Presidential candidate, Trump called NATO obsolete, but he has since changed his position on the alliance's relevance.
The President also had tough words for Russia on Thursday, though he did not fully endorse allegations, backed by US intelligence agencies, that Moscow interfered in the 2016 Presidential election that he won.
Trump meets President Vladimir Putin for the first time face-to-face on Friday in Hamburg, the site of the G20 summit.
The Kremlin said Russia was not guilty of any destablising activity.
The brief visit to Warsaw, to take part in a gathering of regional heads of state, was billed by the White House as an effort to patch up relations with European allies after a tense NATO summit in May.
“To those who would criticise our tough stance, I would point out that the United States has demonstrated not merely with words but with its actions that we stand firmly behind Article 5, the mutual defence commitment,” he said to applause.
Article Five of NATO's 1949 founding charter states that an attack on any member is an attack on all, and allies must render assistance, military if need be.
The stopover was a major diplomatic coup for Poland’s conservative government, which has faced mounting criticism from Brussels over its democratic record and a refusal to accept migrants fleeing war in the Middle East.
The eurosceptic administration agrees with Trump on issues such as migration, climate change, coal mining or abortion, and wants EU institutions to give back some of their powers to national governments.
“We've discussed our mutual commitment to safeguarding the values at the heart of our alliance: freedom, sovereignty and the rule of law,” Trump said in a joint press conference after meeting Polish President Andrzej Duda.
In what was likely veiled criticism of the European Union, Trump condemned “the steady creep of government bureaucracy” and cited the importance of national sovereignty.
In his speech near a monument that commemorates the 1944 Warsaw Uprising against Nazi Germany, the President painted the fight against terrorism, illegal immigration and excessive government powers as an existential one.
European and other G-20 partners have a view of Western values that does not align with Trump’s.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has allowed scores of Syrian refugees into her country, drawing both criticism and praise, and has made fighting global warming a top priority at the summit.
Trump has decided to pull the United States out of the Paris accord on climate change.
(This article has been edited for length)