Germany and France continue to work together for the unity and independence of the European Union despite differences … Schroeder: Germany is under American occupation!

The European Union, represented by France and Germany, works to promote cooperation and resolve differences for the independence of Europe.
News of the French and German efforts comes amid a tense atmosphere between the United States and the European Union after French President Emmanuel Macron expressed the idea of establishing a unified army for the old continent.
The former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has criticized the American policy pursued with European countries and especially with his country and called on German officials to search for other allies who respect the country and its sovereignty.
“We cannot afford it, we are treated as an occupied country”, Schroeder said in an interview with German channel NTV.
Schroeder said: “I observe the actions of the American ambassador in Germany and I have the impression that this ambassador is himself an officer of the occupying forces in the country and not as an ambassador to a foreign country that respects the laws and sovereignty of the state in which he works”.
Schroeder pointed out that it is impossible to stay in the relationship of allies with the United States under the policy and actions of the latter with Germany.
The comments of the former German Chancellor in the atmosphere of the decline in the level of relations between the United States and the European Union, led by Germany and France.
French President Emmanuel Macron, with the clear support of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, launched the idea of a European army that angered US President Donald Trump and distrusted NATO.
France and Germany are working to reach for total cooperation with signs of understanding and solidarity to amplify the unity, which came during the centennial of the end of the First World War.
Both Macron and Merkel have internal problems, where Merkel, been criticized for her immigration policy, and recently been forced to begin her political withdrawal, while Macron’s popularity has fallen sharply and is currently facing popular protests against rising fuel prices.
The French president will deliver a speech in the German parliament that will be the first of its kind for a French president since Jacques Chirac’s speech in 2000, and then hold talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
The German and French parties, despite a number of differences between the two sides, create an atmosphere of understanding on the outline of a draft budget for the euro area, one of the most prominent plans to support the investment Macron, but without agreement on the value of this budget, which the French President hopes to allocate to it Hundreds of billions of Euros.
Germany accepted only the principle of this budget and reluctantly introduced very harsh conditions for its use.