Yuma Sun

Trump, Macron make a show as buds but tussle over Iran

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WASHINGTON — With exaggerate­d handshakes and a pair of kisses, President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron professed a sunny, best-friends relationsh­ip Tuesday, even as the two allies strained to bridge difference­s over the Iran nuclear agreement, Syria and more.

Hosting Macron for the first state visit of his administra­tion, culminatin­g in a lavish dinner Tuesday night, Trump remained firm in his criticism of past and enduring American undertakin­gs in Iran and elsewhere in the Middle East. But he appeared open to the French president’s pleas to maintain U.S. involvemen­t in Syria — and expressed openness to negotiatin­g a new agreement with Iran.

As Trump weighs withdrawin­g the U.S. from the Iran nuclear accord, he issued a warning to Iran against restarting its nuclear program, saying, “They will have bigger problems than they’ve ever had before.”

At a joint White House news conference, he appeared to be more in line with Macron’s push for a longer-term U.S. presence in Syria. Trump, who announced weeks ago that he would withdraw American troops, said Macron reinforced

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP AND FRENCH PRESIDENT EMMANUEL MACRON

the idea of a potential Iranian takeover of territory liberated from the Islamic State group.

“We’ll be coming home,” Trump said, “but we want to leave a strong and lasting footprint.”

Macron told Trump that together the U.S. and France would defeat terrorism, curtail weapons of mass destructio­n in North Korea and Iran, and act together on behalf of the planet. That last point was a reference to Macron’s work to revive the U.S. role in the Paris climate accord to fight global warming, another internatio­nal agreement Trump has spurned.

Difference­s aside, Trump and Macron lavished praise — and even a pair of kisses — on each other Tuesday.

“It’s an honor to call you my friend,” Trump said, after predicting Macron would be a historic leader of France.

In one light moment, Trump sought to demonstrat­e some of the personal chemistry he claimed. The U.S. president brushed something off Macron’s suit jacket, saying, “We have a very special relationsh­ip; in fact, I’ll get that little piece of dandruff off. We have to make him perfect — he is perfect.”

The meetings followed a pomp-filled welcome ceremony on the South Lawn. Highlights included a 21-gun salute and Melania Trump’s wide-brim white hat, which drew more comments than all the rest of the pageantry.

Trump said before an audience of U.S. soldiers and members of his Cabinet that the relationsh­ip he forged with Macron at the start of his presidency was a testament to the “enduring friendship that binds our two nations.” He thanked the French leader for his “steadfast partnershi­p” in the recent missile strike in response to the chemical attack in Syria.

Macron said, “History is calling us. It is urging our people to find the fortitude that has guided us in the most difficult of times. France and with it, Europe, and the United States have an appointmen­t with history.” Later he placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery.

The social highlight of Macron’s visit was Tuesday night’s formal state dinner at the White House. More than 130 guests dined on rack of lamb and nectarine tart and enjoyed an afterdinne­r performanc­e by the Washington National Opera. The previous evening, the leaders and their wives took a helicopter tour of Washington landmarks and had dinner at the Potomac River home of George Washington in Mount Vernon, Virginia.

As he gave a toast at the dinner, Trump hailed the bonds between the U.S. and France, saying, “May our friendship grow even deeper, may our kinship grow even stronger and may our sacred liberty never die.”

As for substantiv­e issues, one of Macron’s main objectives during his three-day visit to Washington was to persuade Trump to stay in the Iran accord, which is aimed at restrictin­g Iran’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons. Trump is skeptical of the pact’s effectiven­ess — “it’s insane, it’s ridiculous,” he said Tuesday — but he declined to say whether he would withdraw the U.S. by the May 12 deadline he has set.

Trump ended his first year in office without receiving a foreign leader on a state visit, the first president in nearly 100 years to fail to do so. He was Macron’s guest last July at the annual Bastille Day military parade in Paris. Macron and his wife, Brigitte, also took Trump and his wife on a tour of Napoleon’s tomb and whisked them up in the Eiffel Tower for dinner overlookin­g the City of Light.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? shake hands during a joint news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS shake hands during a joint news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday.

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