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Photo Credit: DPA |
The White
House announced on Tuesday that US President Barack Obama will be paying
one last unexpected visit to the German capital - his last before he
leaves office.
Obama is now set to stop by Berlin on November 16th, after the divisive
US national election takes place on November 8th and following a trip
to Athens. But the trip will be short, as two days later he will head to an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Lima, Peru. Obama last landed in the Bundesrepublik in April to drop by the Hanover
Messe - one of the most important trade fairs in the world. That visit
was thought to be his last to Europe’s largest economy. In Hanover, Obama praised Chancellor Angela Merkel for her “courageous”
leadership during the ongoing refugee crisis, pushed the controversial
TTIP free trade deal with the EU and US, and urged a preservation of a
united Europe, ahead of the Brexit referendum vote in June. His Berlin trip will involve a meeting with Merkel and the leaders of
Italy, France and the UK. Discussion will most likely centre around the
ongoing conflicts in Syria and Ukraine, as well as the refugee crisis
and TTIP. But the November election will determine how much Obama’s Berlin talks
will ultimately impact future actions after he leaves office in January
and is followed by either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump.
The Local-Germany APEC