Deccan Chronicle

Trump-Macron bromance is getting serious

- Freddy Gray

Remember the neverendin­g handshake? It was July 14, 2017, Bastille Day, and Emmanuel Macron and Donald Trump opened their formal relationsh­ip as leaders of their respective countries by interlocki­ng palms and refusing to let go. They kept at it for a good 30 seconds. They didn’t release even as Trump began kissing Macron’s wife.

It looked like the beginnings of a bitter rivalry. But Trump and Macron weren’t clashing. They were flirting. The night before, the two men — plus wives — had had an intimate dinner in the Eiffel Tower, and they bonded. A great bromance had been born.

For all his posturing, Macron treated the US President like an emperor in Paris. Later this month the Macrons are going to Washington, and Trump will return the favour by honouring them with his administra­tion’s first full state dinner. Macron and Trump now dance cheek-todiplomat­ic-cheek.

This week, President Trump — facing all sorts of domestic problems and a possible trade war with China — decided it might be handy to divert attention abroad and talk tough to the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad over the reported use of chemical weapons. So he called Macron, who is having his own difficulti­es on the home front, and they decided on a “strong, joint response” against Assad.

The French President, who used to work for Rothschild Bank, understand­s how to deal with billionair­es. He knows that to keep ’em keen you have to treat ’em mean. The Bastille Day shake-off was in fact Trump’s attempt to get even. A few weeks earlier, during a photo-op at a Nato summit in Brussels, Macron had gripped Trump’s hand so tightly his knuckles turned white. He also ostentatio­usly blanked Trump on the blue Nato carpet, then boasted about how he had owned the President in a “moment of truth”. Then, after Trump withdrew from the Paris climate accords, Macron pulled a prepostero­us inverse-Trump move, calling a press conference and telling the cameras that his mission was to “make ze planet great again”.

None of this hurt Trump — quite the reverse. It merely picqued his interest in that cocky young guy who runs that country called France. He flirted back at Macron by telling him, publicly, that his 65-year-old wife was “in such good physical shape”. And while in public the two leaders played at hating each other, in private they formed a bond. Macron the globalist darling may have presented himself on his campaign trail as “l’anti-Trump”, and Trump as the anti-globalist, but, au fond, they both worship power and money, and they have both realised that they need each other.

When Trump announced his intention to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, Macron, reportedly after calls with the White House, decided to tell the Arab world to accept it. He dispatched his deputy national security adviser Aurélien Lechevalli­er to Ramallah to instruct the Palestinia­ns as to the merits of Trump’s West Asia vision.

Now, on Syria, Trump and Macron have agreed that something must be done. Both men have been influenced by Mohammad Bin Salman, crown prince of Saudi Arabia, who has been on a charm tour of Britain, America and France. Salman is understood to be desperate to stop Iran’s expansioni­st ambitions, and Assad is allied to Tehran. This week Macron hosted the prince at another lavish dinner in the Louvre. What Macron appreciate­s as much as Trump is that in the Internet age, leadership is performanc­e art. In a way, perhaps, that means that America’s special relationsh­ip with France in the 2010s is less dangerous than the UK-US alliance of the 2000s. Whereas Blair and Bush consummate­d their friendship with a full invasion of Iraq, the new Franco-US entente cordiale can thrive with just public declaratio­ns of support, and perhaps the odd missile hurled at a bad guy.

By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

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