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Posted: 2017-02-21T14:33:24Z | Updated: 2017-02-21T14:33:24Z

In the week before U.S. Vice President Mike Pence visited Brussels and pledged Americas steadfast and enduring commitment to the European Union, White House chief strategist Steve Bannon met with a German diplomat and delivered a different message, according to people familiar with the talks.

Bannon, these people said, signalled to Germanys ambassador to Washington that he viewed the EU as a flawed construct and favoured conducting relations with Europe on a bilateral basis.

Three people who were briefed on the meeting spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter. The German government and the ambassador, Peter Wittig, declined to comment, citing the confidentiality of the talks.

A White House official who checked with Bannon in response to a Reuters query confirmed the meeting had taken place but said the account provided to Reuters was inaccurate. They only spoke for about three minutes and it was just a quick hello, the official said.

The sources described a longer meeting in which Bannon took the time to spell out his world view. They said his message was similar to the one he delivered to a Vatican conference back in 2014 when he was running the right-wing website Breitbart News.

In those remarks, delivered via Skype, Bannon spoke favourably about European populist movements and described a yearning for nationalism by people who dont believe in this kind of pan-European Union.

Western Europe, he said at the time, was built on a foundation of strong nationalist movements, adding: I think its what can see us forward.

The encounter unsettled people in the German government, in part because some officials had been holding out hope that Bannon might temper his views once in government and offer a more nuanced message on Europe in private.

One source briefed on the meeting said it had confirmed the view that Germany and its European partners must prepare for a policy of hostility towards the EU.

A second source expressed concern, based on his contacts with the administration, that there was no appreciation for the EUs role in ensuring peace and prosperity in post-war Europe.

There appears to be no understanding in the White House that an unravelling of the EU would have grave consequences, the source said.

The White House said there was no transcript of the conversation. The sources who had been briefed on it described it as polite and stressed there was no evidence Trump was prepared to go beyond his rhetorical attacks on the EU - he has repeatedly praised Britains decision to leave - and take concrete steps to destabilise the bloc.

But anxiety over the White House stance led French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and Wolfgang Ischinger, chairman of the Munich Security Conference, to issue unusual calls last week for Pence to affirm during his visit to Europe that the U.S. was not aiming to break up the EU.

Pence obliged on Monday in Brussels, pledging strong ties between the United States and the EU, and making clear his message was shared by the president.

President Trump and I look forward to working together with you and the European Union to deepen our political and economic partnership, he said.

But the message did not end the concerns in European capitals.

We are worried and we should be worried, Thomas Matussek, senior adviser at Flint Global and a former German ambassador to the Britain and the United Nations, told Reuters.

No one knows anything at the moment about what sort of decisions will be coming out of Washington. But it is clear that the man on top and the people closest to him feel that its the nation state that creates identity and not what they see as an amorphous group of countries like the EU.

With elections looming in the Netherlands, France and Germany this year, European officials said they hoped Pence, Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson could convince Trump to work constructively with the EU.

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The worst-case scenario from Europes point of view was described by Ischinger in an article published last week, entitled How Europe should deal with Trump.

He said that if the U.S. administration actively supported right-wing populists in the looming election campaigns it would trigger a major transatlantic crisis.

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton and Alastair Macdonald in Brussels, Jeff Mason in Washington; editing by Mark John)