Albuquerque Journal

Trump, Macron look past climate pact clash

Leaders find common ground on need for postwar plan in Syria

- BY VIVIAN SALAMA

PARIS — President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron set aside lingering difference­s on climate change during their meeting in France on Thursday, asserting that it shouldn’t prevent them from working together toward a postwar roadmap for Syria and to enhance Mideast security.

Trump, standing alongside Macron at a news conference, said the two nations have “occasional disagreeme­nts” but that would not disrupt a friendship that dates back to the American Revolution. He remained non-committal about the United States eventually rejoining the global climate agreement that bears Paris’ name, telling Macron, “if it happens that will be wonderful, and if it doesn’t that will be OK too.”

Macron acknowledg­ed sharp difference­s on the Paris climate pact but said the two leaders could find other areas of cooperatio­n. “Should that have an impact on the discussion­s we’re having on all other topics? No, absolutely not,” he said.

Trump arrived in the French capital on Thursday for a whirlwind, 36-hour visit to meet with Macron and tackle potential solutions to the crisis in Syria and discuss broader counterter­rorism strategies before being feted at Bastille Day celebratio­ns Friday.

The president landed in Paris amid questions about emails showing that his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., welcomed the prospect of receiving Russian government support in last year’s presidenti­al campaign between his father and Hillary Clinton.

Trump defended his namesake, saying that “most people would have taken that meeting,” a message that contradict­ed his incoming FBI director’s testimony that Donald Trump Jr. should have instead alerted authoritie­s.

Trump called his son a “wonderful young man” and continued to downplay the issue, saying that “nothing happened” as a result of the meeting.

During his flight to Paris, Trump had praised his son as “a good boy” and a “good kid” and said that he’d listened to the Russian lawyer’s pitch “out of politeness.”

Trump also continued to cast doubt on the conclusion of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that Putin had meddled in the election, telling reporters that, “the next time I’m with Putin, I’m going to ask him: Who were you really for? Because I can’t believe that he would have been for me.” The conversati­on was originally described as off-the-record, but the White House decided to release portions Thursday.

Topics like resolving the yearslong civil war in Syria and countering terrorism gave Trump and Macron areas to cooperate. The two said they also discussed the security situations in Ukraine and Libya.

Trump praised a cease-fire in southern Syria that he helped broker last week with Russia and Jordan and said the U.S. was working on a second cease-fire in a “rough part of Syria.”

Macron said he discussed with Trump a road map for the country that would help stabilize the situation after the war ends. He has argued for interventi­on in Syria, saying that President Bashar Assad is a threat to the war-ravaged country.

 ?? YVES HERMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emmanuel Macron, second from right, and his wife Brigitte take U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump to dinner at the Jules Verne restaurant in Paris Thursday.
YVES HERMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Emmanuel Macron, second from right, and his wife Brigitte take U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump to dinner at the Jules Verne restaurant in Paris Thursday.

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