Dallas shootings cast shadow over Obama trip to Spain
President Barack
Obama will meet with the King of Spain and Spain's acting prime minister
in Madrid on Sunday, but the trip that was meant to show solidarity
with Europe has been overshadowed by violent events in the United
States.The visit is Obama's
first to Spain as president. White House officials said it was
important for Obama to make the trip, because Spain was the only major
European country he had not traveled to during his term.
Obama
was supposed to spend two days in Spain after attending a NATO summit
in Warsaw earlier this week. At the summit, the United States, Spain and
the other allied nations pledged to stand united in the face of threats
from Russia and fall out from Britain's vote to leave the European
Union.
But, after a sniper killed
five police officers in Dallas on Thursday following the fatal shootings
earlier in the week of two black men by police in Louisiana and
Minnesota, the White House decided to cut the trip short so Obama could
go to Dallas.
Plans for
sightseeing in Seville and a town hall meeting with Spanish citizens
were canceled. Instead Obama, who landed in Madrid late on Saturday
night, will squeeze in sessions with King Don Felipe and acting Prime
Minister Mariano Rajoy on Sunday.
He will also address troops at Naval Station Rota, before heading back to the United States on Sunday night.
In an interview with Spain's El Pais published on Saturday, Obama called Spain "an indispensable European partner."
"Spain
is a strong NATO ally, we're grateful for Spain's many decades of
hosting U.S. forces, and we're major trading partners," Obama said in
the interview. "That's why the United States is deeply committed to
maintaining our relationship with a strong, unified Spain."
Obama's visit to
Madrid comes after Rajoy's conservative People's Party (PP) failed to
win a parliamentary majority last month leaving the country in a
political stalemate as the parties work to form a coalition government.
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