Iran Daily

Allies race to clinch G7 face-saver before Trump’s early exit

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The leaders of the world’s richest democracie­s scrambled to find a facesaving formula Saturday to counter the impression that the G7 summit had served to only deepen the rift between Donald Trump’s Washington and its traditiona­l allies.

The text of the annual G7 joint communique is usually all but final before the leaders meet for two days of glad-handing and group photo opportunit­ies, but this year officials were still negotiatin­g behind closed doors as Trump prepared to leave, AFP reported.

According to a White House source, the parties had not given up hope that language can be agreed before Trump flies out of Quebec – but he would not deny reports that the US was objecting to the phrase “rules-based internatio­nal order”, a formerly uncontrove­rsial concept for a group of friendly countries set up in 1975 to promote that very idea.

If the G7 fails to agree a final communique – or if any compromise language is watered down too far for the sake of appeasing the “America First” economic nationalis­t agenda – Canada’s G7 will be remembered mainly for fierce disagreeme­nts over Trump’s unilateral trade tariffs and his surprise request to return Russia to the fold.

Trump was due to leave the summit early bound for Singapore and a historic nuclear summit with North Korean autocrat Kim Jong-un – and the clock was running down for any agreement on how to resolve a trade dispute that could yet spiral into a full-scale trade war that would split the western alliance.

Even before he flew out of Washington on Friday to hook up with the rest of the group, Trump managed to rile his counterpar­ts by declaring that it was time that Russia be brought back into the G7. The idea was swiftly shot down.

Trump was then confronted with a litany of complaints over his decision to impose tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum when the leaders held roundtable talks chaired by summit host Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

A member of French President Emmanuel Macron’s team characteri­zed the talks as “frank and robust,” with Trump first repeating his lengthy diatribe about what he regards as unfair trade restrictio­ns – before the Europeans responded with their own gripes.

Sources in two European delegation­s said that Merkel was working on a proposal for a mechanism that would allow them to reopen a dialogue with the US on trade through a de facto working group that would develop mutually agreed statistics.

The German plan would aim to address the US claim that cheap aluminum and steel is causing a national security risk by threatenin­g the viability of vital American industries – thus justifying Trump’s imposition of tariffs.

Trudeau told Trump that it was “unacceptab­le” to impose tariffs on national security grounds when he had a one-on-one with the US leader.

But Trump talked up the prospect that some kind of face-saving formula could be found.

“I think we’ll have a joint statement,” he said as he appeared alongside Trudeau.

Officials worked late into the night in an effort to reach an agreement.

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AFP

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