(Bloomberg) -- The unified European approach to resolving tensions in the Persian Gulf showed signs of strain, with a senior German official warning that the U.K. may be drifting closer to an American-led operation that had previously been rebuffed by the governments in Paris and London.
Boris Johnson’s rise to become British prime minister last week could put a nascent European Union mission in jeopardy. That is according to Johann Wadephul, a lawmaker with German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, who is also a senior position on the foreign affairs committee. He cited comments by Johnson’s foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, that he said undermined any EU initiative.
“The new government appears to have changed course to align with the Americans,” Wadephul said in an interview. “The U.S. is pursuing a completely different path than the one we are.”
Raab told The Times over the weekend that any EU naval mission wouldn’t be “viable” without U.S. support. On Monday, he told BBC radio that he wanted as broad a coalition as possible.
Simmering tensions with Iran involving attacks on tankers and drones is driving a wedge between the U.S. and its European allies, with the U.K. and France last week essentially opting out of the U.S.-backed “Operation Sentinel.” EU governments last week floated an alternative European maritime initiative separate from the American project.
European Approach
Germany doubled down on its position and all but ruled out a new U.S. request to help secure the vital shipping artery through the Persian Gulf.
Nils Schmid, a Social Democratic lawmaker on the foreign affairs committee in Germany’s lower house, said he would only side with a non-military EU effort in the region. Foreign Minister Heiko Maas ruled out participating in a U.S.-led proposal during a closed-door meeting with lawmakers last week, he said.
“Europeans don’t want to go along with this confrontational logic of the U.S. government,” Schmid said in an interview on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump’s administration ratcheted up pressure on Merkel on Tuesday, with a statement from the U.S. embassy saying it had formally sought help from Germany, France and the U.K. to secure the Strait of Hormuz and “combat Iranian aggression.”
“Members of the German government have been clear that freedom of navigation should be protected,” a spokeswoman for Ambassador Richard Grenell said in an emailed statement. “Our question is, protected by whom?”
‘Maximum Pressure’
An official with Germany’s foreign ministry said any alignment with Trump’s campaign of “maximum pressure” is out of the question -- and that the request had been acknowledged, without offering any contribution. Merkel’s government is instead in close contact with French and British counterparts, the official said on condition of anonymity.
Merkel’s CDU, which governs on the federal level with the Social Democrats, is less resistant to a military-oriented mission. Wadephul said that, for now, he could support German aerial surveillance involvement.
But unlike the British and French military, German participation in foreign missions has to be approved by the lower house of parliament, or Bundestag, meaning that Social Democratic opposition rules out any such move.