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After First Face-To-Face Meeting, Trump And Merkel Address Media

President Donald Trump looks on as German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses the media at a joint news conference Friday at the White House.
Chip Somodevilla Getty Images
President Donald Trump looks on as German Chancellor Angela Merkel addresses the media at a joint news conference Friday at the White House.

Updated at 3:25 p.m. ET

At a wide-ranging and occasionally tense news conference after their first in-person meeting Friday, President Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed trade, border policy — and had one notable exchange when Trump was asked about his unproven claims that former President Obama tapped the phones at Trump Tower last year.

Trump declined the opportunity to retract the claim, telling the media that "we said nothing" when he tweeted, "How low has President Obama gone to tapp my phones during the very sacred election process," and that he was merely quoting a "very talented legal mind" he had seen on Fox News.

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"You should be talking to Fox," Trump said.

After the conference, Fox's Shepard Smith said, "Fox News cannot confirm Judge Napolitano's commentary," apparently referring to the report Trump cited.

But first, when addressing the wiretapping question, Trump told Merkel: "At least we have something in common, perhaps" — making an implied reference to the 2013 revelations that the National Security Administration had spied on European leaders, including Merkel.

Merkel did not reply.

The moment punctuated remarks that focused predominantly on trade and training the countries' workers for manufacturing in the 21st century. In his statement at the start, Trump praised Germany's apprenticeship program that trains people to join the industrial workforce.

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He also took a moment to thank Merkel for Germany's continued support of the war effort in Afghanistan, and for its role as a "counter-ISIS coalition member" — noting pointedly that "immigration is a privilege, not a right."

Trump was also careful to emphasize that NATO allies should be paying "what they owe" for the protections of the defensive alliance. Both leaders noted Germany's commitment to spend 2 percent of its GDP on defense — a goal built into the treaty's terms.

Merkel, for her part, praised international trade agreements, saying they work best when they work as a win-win for all the parties involved.

Business and trade was a principal focus for Merkel from the start. She embarked on her trans-Atlantic trip with some notable companions: top executives at BMW, Siemens and the industrial parts manufacturer Schaeffler.

Her high-placed company sent as good a message as any about the direction Merkel expected these introductory talks to take. The two world leaders were expected to discuss wide-ranging issues — from NATO to Russian President Vladimir Putin, from the European Union to North Korea — but business matters may well have dominated their two-hour conversation and working lunch.

And unavoidably with business comes the question of trade.

"She wants to make the point that the companies have created thousands of jobs in the United States," Tanit Koch, the editor of the German newspaper Bild, tells NPR's Rachel Martin.

Citing Merkel's interview with another German paper, Saarbruecker Zeitung, the BBC says the chancellor planned to remind Trump that BMW's plant in South Carolina exported "more cars than GM and Ford together" from America.

"I'll make that clear," Merkel added.

She was also expected to emphasize that an import tax on German goods to the U.S. — which during his campaign, Trump threatened to impose on countries that have a trade surplus over America, the BBC notes — would hurt both nations in the long run.

"The English word she puts a lot of emphasis on right now is the word 'reciprocity,' " Koch says. "So if there's an import tax coming from the U.S., then the U.S. will probably have to face something similar from Europe."

Trump, for his part, was "very interested in hearing the chancellor's views on her experience interacting with Putin," an administration official tells NBC. Few leaders on the world stage have more experience in this realm than Merkel, a Russian speaker who has had her fair share of interactions with the Russian president during the dozen or so years she has been chancellor.

Still, as the German publication Deutsche Welle points out, "the bar of what to expect from their first meeting [is] rather low, especially given the prior verbal tiffs between them and their different domestic audiences."

And those "prior verbal tiffs" are not insignificant.

Both as a candidate and president-elect, Trump had some harsh words for the German leader, saying she is "ruining Germany" and has "made a catastrophic mistake" in welcoming more than a million migrants and refugees in recent years.

"The German people are going to end up overthrowing this woman," Trump said on the campaign trail. "I don't know what the hell she's thinking."

In turn, Merkel offered Trump a tepid note of congratulations shortly after his election, taking the opportunity to state that:

"Germany and America are bound by their values: democracy, freedom, the respect for the law and the dignity of human beings, independent of their origin, skin colour, religion, gender, sexual orientation or political position. On the basis of these values I offer the future president of the United States, Donald Trump, close co-operation."

Trump's skeptical view of NATO — asserting that others in the defensive alliance have not been paying their fair share — has also made Germany and its European allies wary.

In a January phone call, Merkel and Trump reportedly agreed on NATO's "fundamental importance." And she is expected to tell her counterpart on Friday that "Germany is committed to do more for the defense, to increase our defense spending incrementally," says Peter Wittig, German ambassador to the U.S.

He tells PBS NewsHour that in the wake of Brexit, which Trump has loudly applauded, Merkel also will stress that "we will do everything to keep the European Union as a strong and resilient economic and political union."

All this makes for a tenuous balance for the German chancellor, who faces a tough national election of her own in September.

"What we know from the polls — as much as we can trust them nowadays — is that you have 80 to 90 percent of Germans saying they pretty much abhor what he's doing," Koch tells NPR.

But anything resembling a heavy-handed rebuke was unlikely. Quite the opposite, in fact: Hopes remain that Friday, if nothing else, might help reset the relationship between the two leaders.

Or as Merkel told Saarbruecker Zeitung: "It's always better to talk with each other than about each other."

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.