King Charles lands in Germany for first overseas state visit as monarch
King Charles III landed in Germany on Wednesday to begin his first state visit abroad since becoming British monarch, as part of efforts to turn the page on years of rocky relations between Great Britain and the European Union after its exit from the bloc.
Charles, who succeeded his mother Queen Elizabeth II as the British monarch in September, had been due to travel first to France, but cancelled that part of the tour due to violent social unrest over President Emmanuel Macron’s new pension law.
During his three-day visit to the capital Berlin, the eastern state of Brandenburg and the northern port city of Hamburg, Charles will address issues facing Germany and the UK such as sustainability and the Ukraine crisis, as well as commemorate the past, according to Buckingham Palace.
On Wednesday, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will greet Charles and his wife Queen Consort Camilla with military honours at Berlin’s most famous landmark, the Brandenburg Gate, a symbol of the country’s division during the Cold War and subsequent reunification.
Steinmeier said it was an important “European gesture” that Charles had chosen France and Germany for his first state visit, even before his coronation in May.
“To him and obviously all Britons, I want to say that we in Germany, in Europe, wish for close and friendly relations with the United Kingdom even after Brexit,” he said in a video message ahead of the trip.
The royal couple will then be guests of honour at a state banquet at the presidential palace, Schloss Bellevue.
On Thursday in Berlin, Charles will address the German lower house of parliament, the Bundestag – which he last addressed in 2020 as Prince of Wales – and meet some of the 1 million Ukrainians who have taken refuge in Germany from the war in their country.
Later in the day, he will meet representatives from a joint German-British military unit for a demonstration of their bridge-building amphibious vehicles in Brandenburg.
On Friday, he will visit a church in Hamburg that was destroyed by allied bombing in World War II, and meet with representatives of firms deploying green technology in the port.
Steinmeier said he had extended an invitation to Charles, who has travelled to Germany more than 40 times, at the funeral of his mother last September.
The British government, however, makes the ultimate decisions on such state visits, which form part of its use of the monarchy’s soft power.
As such, the trip was a clear sign of British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s push to reset relations with Europe, said Anand Menon, director of the academic think-tank UK in a Changing Europe.
However, any warmer relations with Europe brought about by the visit could cool quickly if other post-Brexit issues flare up. These include if the effort fails to yield Britain’s readmittance to the Horizon programme, the EU’s key funding programme for research and innovation, with a €95.5 billion budget.
Macron has suggested Charles’ visit to France could be rescheduled for the summer.
Source: REUTERS