Essay On Angela Merkel

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Angela Merkel & Barack Obama

The relationship between the leaders of the United States of America and Germany has always been an awkward one. The countries have fought on the opposite sides of two World Wars, and for most of the late 20th Century, Germany was a divided nation. Today, the two countries are allies, but the leaders have a large gap to bridge to stay on good terms. In 2014, that is up to Barack Obama, the first black President of the United States of America, and Angela Merkel, the first female Chancellor of Germany.
Chancellor Merkel started life as Angela Kasner, on July 17th, 1954 in Hamburg. Her parents, Horst, a Lutheran pastor and Herlind, a teacher, raised Angela and her brother and sister in a small town north of Berlin, in the German Democratic Republic, what the rest of the world considered East Germany. This was the communist side of Germany, heavily aligned with the Soviet Union from the end of World War II until 1990. Young Angela grew up in Templin, taking part in the Free German Youth movement. She showed leadership skills while just a teenager, and became a district board representative and secretary of Agitprop. This was the agitation and propaganda arm of the youth movement. Angela went on to study physics at the University of Leipzig, and earned her doctorate in 1978. While there, she married physicist Ulrich Merkel, but they divorced in 1982. She worked as a chemist at the Central Institute for Physical Chemistry, Academy of Sciences from 1978 to 1990. When the wall separating Berlin fell, Angela’s life took a new course.
As massive changes enveloped her country, Angela Merkel decided she needed to be a part of it. In 1989, She joined Demokratischer Aufbruchfirst, and quickly wo...

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...the invitation while congratulating Chancellor Merkel on creating a new government at the end of 2013. Merkel is not ready to let bygones be bygones, though. She has publicly stated that relations between the U.S. and Germany were heavily strained as Snowden flooded the internet with NSA documents. President Obama will need to work fast to strengthen the bonds with Chancellor Merkel. The shift in Ukraine’s leadership, and Russia’s subsequent annexation of Crimea means this is no time for the U.S. and Germany to be at odds with one another. For her part, Chancellor Merkel has taken a stand similar to Obama’s when it comes to Russia and Crimea. They both have agreed on sanctions against Russia. Merkel has even called on all of the European countries to make sure Russia knows they all stand united, while at the same time leaving the lines of communication open.

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