Germany and France are furious with Donald Trump - and he's not even taken office yet

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German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and French Minister for Economy and Finance Michel Sapin pose for a picture at the Franco-German digital summit in Berlin, Germany, December 13, 2016.

REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande, and French Minister for Economy and Finance Michel Sapin.

LONDON - European politicians have not been quiet in the aftermath of US President-elect Donald Trump's inflammatory interviews with the Times and German newspaper BILD.

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Trump foretold the end of the European Union, called NATO obsolete, and doubled down his attacks on German Chancellor Angela Merkel, calling her refugee policy a "catastrophic mistake."

Since then, European politicians have spoken out against Trump's comments and jumped to the defence of the German leader:

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier also said that Trump's view on NATO had "caused astonishment" in the EU and added that himself and NATO's secretary-general were alarmed.

While Europeans responded firmly to Trump's comments, Merkel said she would wait until after his inauguration and then planned to work with him at all levels of government and that Europe would remain strong. "I will continue to work to ensure that the 27 member states work together effectively and, above all, in a forward-looking way," Merkel concluded.

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Trump's criticism seems to have spurred a rare spirit of European solidarity. "The more he [Trump] makes this sort of statement, the more Europeans close ranks," Sapin told reporters.

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