World comes to grips with Trump's dark vision
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World comes to grips with Trump's dark vision

Protesters place a photo of Donald Trump in a trash bin during a rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on Friday, just before the new US president was sworn in. (EPA Photo)
Protesters place a photo of Donald Trump in a trash bin during a rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on Friday, just before the new US president was sworn in. (EPA Photo)

In the Philippines, nationalists rallied outside the US Embassy in Manila, setting fire to an American flag with a picture of President Donald Trump’s face. In China, state media highlighted the “violent” protests that accompanied his inauguration.

And in Germany, the vice-chancellor warned of a “drastic radicalisation” in US politics and said Berlin stood ready to fill the void left by an isolationist Washington.

In countries around the world, alarmed reactions greeted Trump’s ascent to power and his inaugural pledge: “From this day forward, it’s going to be only America first.”

But some world leaders embraced the new reality, seeking to accommodate a galvanising political force whose message has been echoed in mass movements across continents.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan, who was the first world leader to meet with Trump after his election in November, said he hoped to hold a summit meeting with the new president as soon as possible.

He called Japan’s alliance with the United States an “axis of Japan’s foreign and security policies", even though Trump was vocal as a candidate in attacking Japanese trade practices and questioning US military support for the country.

But in Berlin, where Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government has been rattled by anti-immigrant discontent before upcoming elections, Sigmar Gabriel, the vice-chancellor, said there were “highly nationalist tones” in Trump’s speech, which he said reflected a “drastic radicalisation” of US politics. “You have to take the man seriously,” Gabriel said.

He said that if Trump made good on his pledges to rip up trade deals and disregard long-standing alliances, Germany stood ready to fill the void.

“Should the United States start a trade war with China and all of Asia, then we as Europeans and Germans are fair partners,” Gabriel said. “Europe and Germany need a strategy geared toward Asia and China — and we have new opportunities.”

President Francois Hollande of France, battling nationalist currents in his own country, did not wait for Trump to give his address before suggesting that France’s course would divert from Washington’s new direction.

“We are in an open world economy, and it is not possible nor advisable to want to be isolated from the world economy,” he said. “We must not imagine France closed with respect to the rest of the world.”

“This would mean the loss of jobs, the loss of skills and the loss of development for our economy."

Others were struck by the dark tones of Trump’s speech. In Japan, Goro Hashimoto, a special editor at the right-leaning Yomiuri Shimbun, the world’s largest-circulation newspaper, compared Trump’s speech ro John F Kennedy’s 1961 inaugural address — and not favourably.

“When I heard Kennedy’s speech when I was a child, I was so excited,” Hashimoto said. “He talked about American values as well as the benefits for the world. Trump didn’t talk in that way.”

In Beijing, Trump’s swearing-in took place at 1am Saturday local time, and well into the day, there was no official reaction to his inaugural address from a government whose statements are tightly scripted.

Hours before the inauguration, on Friday afternoon, a government spokeswoman had repeated boilerplate about the importance of bilateral relations between China and the United States, even though Trump and his cabinet picks have been sharply critical of Beijing.

Relations “have had their ups and downs, but they have continued to move forward", Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for China’s Foreign Ministry, told reporters. “China-US relations should push forward from this new starting point to make greater progress.”

Hours after the inauguration, Hua’s comments were posted online in English by People’s Daily, the voice of the Communist Party.

While China’s reaction was muted, Taiwan’s president, Tsai Ing-wen, was quick to offer her congratulations to Trump.

“Democracy is what ties Taiwan and the US together,” Tsai tweeted within a minute of Trump’s swearing-in. “Look forward to advancing our friendship & partnership.”

Last month, Tsai called Trump to congratulate him on his victory, the first leader of Taiwan to directly communicate with a US president or president-elect in decades. The United States does not have formal diplomatic ties to Taiwan, which China considers its own territory, and the phone call elicited strong criticism from Beijing.

Until this month, Tsai had not used her Twitter account in more than two years.

Other politicians were also effusive. In Australia on Saturday, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of Australia, whose government has banished refugees who tried to reach Australia by boat, took to Twitter to wish Trump “every success” and predicted “a great future ahead of us".

And in Brazil, an ultranationalist legislator, Jair Bolsonaro, expressed glee over the inauguration.

“Congratulations, new president of United States of America,” Bolsonaro, a conservative former army paratrooper who is preparing his own presidential bid in the 2018 election, said on Twitter.

But others in Brazil saw ominous signs.

“We can root for the possibility that Trump is merely trying to bluff the world with his offencive rhetoric on trade and global elites,” said Marcos Troyjo, a Brazilian economist and diplomat who writes on international affairs for the newspaper Folha de S Paulo.

Still, Troyjo said that Trump’s first moves as president signalled that he was already creating a “stockpile of uncertainty and turbulence".

“Time to buckle your seatbelts and cross your fingers,” Troyjo said.

In Thailand, some 30 foreigners living in the country gathered at Roadhouse BBQ Bangkok in the Silom area on Saturday for the "Women's March Bangkok".

The Women's March is part of an international campaign on the first full day of Mr Trump's presidency.

The rally is among events elsewhere planned in solidarity with the Women's March in Washington, which is expected to draw 200,000 people.

Organisers aim to highlight women's rights, which they perceive to be under threat from the new US administration.

Some 30 foreigners living in Thailand gather at Roadhouse BBQ Bangkok in the Silom area on Saturday for the "Women's March Bangkok". (Photos by Patipat Janthong)

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