WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 A planned meeting between European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas and Secretary of State Marco Rubio was abruptly canceled Wednesday due to 鈥渟cheduling issues,鈥 coming as between Europe and the United States.
Officials from both sides blamed scheduling challenges for preventing the pair, who last in Germany last month, from meeting in Washington.
However, European officials said they were caught off guard, and, notably, Kallas had previewed her planned talks with Rubio just two days earlier.
In recent weeks, President Donald Trump has thrown the partnership between the U.S. and Europe into turmoil by that he says will match tariffs faced by American products. EU officials have traveled to Washington .
Top Trump administration officials also have warned Europe that it must start , including Ukraine, and sidelined the Europeans from their initial talks with Russia on ending the war. In a remarkable shift, by refusing to blame Russia for its invasion of Ukraine at the United Nations this week and joined Moscow in voting against a Europe-backed Ukrainian resolution.
In a bid to mend relations, French President on Monday for a White House meeting with Trump seeking support. , whose country is no longer a member of the EU but often aligns itself with the continental bloc on foreign policy, is due to visit Thursday.
Kallas herself had said Monday that she would be holding talks with Rubio 鈥渙n the issues that are of interest to both of us,鈥 which for the EU are chiefly and transatlantic relations.
鈥淚t is clear that the statements coming from the United States make us all worried,鈥 she told reporters after chairing a meeting of EU foreign ministers.
Kallas said she hoped the EU-U.S. relationship can continue to function.
鈥淪o far, we do not have any indication that it would not. Of course it is going to change, that is very clear. But we should not throw something out the window that has worked well so far,鈥 she said.
In a terse text message, her office referred all questions about why the meeting was canceled at short notice to the State Department.
A senior U.S. official said the planned meeting, which had never appeared on Rubio鈥檚 public schedule, had been pulled down due to 鈥渁n unavoidable scheduling conflict.鈥 The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
Rubio attended Trump鈥檚 Cabinet meeting at the White House, which began late Wednesday morning.
The cancellation came less than a week after the State Department鈥檚 policy planning office sent an internal memo instructing officials who deal with Europe to highlight two specific issues in interactions with European counterparts. The Feb. 21 memo, seen by The Associated Press, also mentioned tentative plans for an upcoming Rubio meeting with Kallas.
The two issues of concern identified in the memo were 鈥淔reedom of Speech and Free Opposition鈥 and 鈥淢igration.鈥
On the former, the memo said Rubio and other U.S. diplomats should emphasize in their discussions with European officials the importance that the Trump administration attaches to free speech.
It noted that Vice President JD Vance had said in this month that the West should 鈥渦nite around free speech, halt censorship, reject suppressing opposition, jailing people for tweets and memes, etc.鈥
鈥淭he United States cannot continue supporting a continent that drifts in an authoritarian direction,鈥 the memo said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 bad for Europe and bad for us.鈥
On , the memo said U.S. officials, including Rubio, should refer to Europe鈥檚 鈥渄e facto open borders policy鈥 as a 鈥渄isaster鈥 that must end. Trump has made on illegal immigration and carrying out a signature priority.
鈥淭he United States is changing course on migration policy under Trump,鈥 it said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 well past time for Europe to do the same. We want you to remain civilization partners and to do that, you must get this under control.鈥
It was not clear if the blunt language in the memo contributed to the cancellation of the Rubio-Kallas meeting.
Although her meeting with Rubio was pulled down, Kallas was due to meet with U.S. senators and members of Congress to discuss the war in Ukraine and EU-U.S. ties during her two-day trip to Washington and to take part in a talk about those issues at the Hudson Institute research organization.
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Cook reported from Brussels.
Lorne Cook And Matthew Lee, The Associated Press