Trump is Bastille Day guest of city he derided
PARIS — President Donald Trump’s visit to Paris today will take him to a city he has repeatedly derided — and at the side of a French leader best known to Americans as the earnest young man with the endless handshake.
“Paris isn’t Paris any longer,” Trump declared in February, implying the city had been ruined by jihadi attacks. “I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris,” he said just last month as he announced the U.S. would leave the Paris climate agreement.
But Trump isn’t the only politician who can use Paris to make a symbolic point.
When Trump arrives in the French capital, it will be as French President Emmanuel Macron’s guest of honor, with a private tour of Napoleon’s tomb, dinner at the Eiffel Tower and, to top off the Paris tourist trifecta, a seat at the tribune as American troops open the Bastille Day parade on the Champs-Elysees.
The visit will be Trump’s first appearance before reporters since news broke this week that his son appeared to welcome Russian help in the U.S. election. He’ll likely face questions about that at a news conference with Macron.
It was Macron, who at 39 is modern France’s youngest president, whose handshake with Trump left both men with white knuckles and clenched jaws. Macron later described it as “a moment of truth” between them.
Still, Macron extended an invitation to Trump to join the national day celebrations, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the U.S. entry into World War I. And the meetings today have been billed by both governments as a time to deepen the ties that bind the U.S. and France.
“What our two countries share is stronger (than our differences), given our peoples and our histories and our values as well. So yes, there is a disagreement, like I said to President Trump, and then I said it publicly, because there is nothing to hide. That being said, it does not prevent us from cooperating in many fields,” Macron said Saturday.
Today’s talks are expected to center on fighting terrorism and defense policy, two areas where French-American cooperation has traditionally been strong.