G7 leaders use kid gloves to welcome Trump
Donald Trump’s fellow G7 leaders greeted the president’s aggressive pre-summit bluster with a warm, reassuring breeze in an attempt to bridge their vast divide with him on trade and welcoming Russia back to their fold.
Trump, in turn, responded by using his first public remarks on Canadian soil as president to crack jokes with summit host Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at their bilateral meeting at a scenic Quebec resort overlooking the St. Lawrence River.
The president also offered reassurance that Canada and the U.S. have made progress in their trade dispute over his administration’s punishing steel and aluminum tariffs on all the other G7 members.
Trump insisted the Canada-U.S. relationship is as good or better than it has ever been, and he even quipped that there might be a way the badly divided G7 could reach a consensus in their final communique today.
“I think we’ll have a joint statement,” Trump said.
The possibility of that seemed far-fetched only hours earlier.
For the past week, it was an open question in Ottawa whether Trump would actually show up, after he imposed the heavy tariffs. The G7 leaders were planning to press him to lift those duties in their opening sessions Friday, egged on by Trump’s early morning tweets complaining about unfair trade and Canada’s supply management.
Then Trump upped the ante. He mused to reporters at the White House in pre-departure remarks about allowing Russia back into the G7. That moved him squarely offside with most of his fellow G7 leaders, including Trudeau, on one of their most serious, shared international security concerns.
“Why are we having a meeting without Russia in the meeting?” Trump said at the White House just before departing.
“They should let Russia come back in because we should have Russia at the negotiating table.”
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte — a rookie populist who’s been on the job only a week — fuelled the disharmony amongst the G7 by tweeting his support for the U.S. president’s position.
European Council President Donald Tusk expressed broad concern about Trump’s opposition to the international rules-based order, because it “is being challenged, quite surprisingly, not by the usual suspects but by its main architect and guarantor, the U.S.”
“We will not stop trying to convince our American friends and President Trump that undermining this order makes no sense at all because it would only play into the hands of those who seek a new post-West order where liberal democracy and fundamental freedoms would cease to exist,” said Tusk.
Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland flatly rejected allowing Russia back into the G7 fold. She listed the reasons why the G7 yanked Russia’s invitation to the club in 2014, including its invasion of Ukraine, the annexation of Crimea and the recent chemical weapon attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter in the British town of Salisbury.
Freeland said Russia has made it clear with actions like these that it has no interest in following the rules of Western democracies, like those in the G7.