Bangkok Post

Trump seeks respite in Paris

President heads to France under cloud

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PARIS: US President Donald Trump was yesterday headed to Paris, hoping to find respite from the deepening scandal over alleged Russian efforts to secure his White House victory that has ensnared his eldest son.

During a lightning visit full of pomp and ceremony, Mr Trump was to be the guest of honour at France’s Bastille Day festivitie­s after a trip to Napoleon’s tomb and a Michelin-starred dinner at the Eiffel Tower.

Mr Trump and his host, recently-elected French President Emmanuel Macron, will watch troops parade down the Champs-Elysees and mark 100 years since the United States entered World War I on France’s side.

Back home, Mr Trump on Wednesday defended his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr, praising his “transparen­cy” for releasing an email chain about a meeting with a Russian lawyer and again decrying as a political “witch hunt” the row about whether the Kremlin helped him win the White House last November.

Mr Macron, 39, is hoping to use the weight of history and French grandeur to charm the unpredicta­ble Mr Trump — six weeks after welcoming Russia’s Vladimir Putin at the grandiose Palace of Versailles.

In London, Berlin, Brussels and Paris, European leaders are wondering how best to handle the US president, whose nationalis­t “America First” agenda has upended transatlan­tic relations.

Mr Macron hopes to build a relationsh­ip with the new occupant of the White House that might enable him to influence US policy or, at the least, help avoid serious strains between the EU and Washington.

There are already tensions over climate change and trade, while Mr Trump was openly critical of the EU last year and snubbed a handshake with German Chancellor Angela Merkel during their first meeting in March.

“It’s very difficult to play chess with a man whose strategy is a complete mystery and whose only consistenc­y is his pursuit of American national interest,” foreign affairs expert Bertrand Badie of Sciences Po university in Paris said. “To imagine that you might change his mind on something is simply mad.”

Talks between the two leaders are expected to focus on joint efforts to combat the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, where American and French troops are in action side-by-side.

The two leaders will dine together at the Jules Verne restaurant up the Eiffel Tower, enjoying stunning views of the French capital along with their wives, Melania and Brigitte.

Mr Trump and Mr Macron appear to have little in common, with their views at odds on everything from globalisat­ion to immigratio­n.

Mr Macron was even described as the “anti-Trump” during his run for the French presidency this year.

As well as a huge generation­al gap — Mr Trump at 71 is almost twice Mr Macron’s age — there is scant evidence of any overlap of interests in their personal lives.

Mr Macron also criticised Mr Trump’s decision to withdraw the US from the global Paris climate change agreement last month and used the American’s own slogan against him, saying: “Make our planet great again.”

Mr Macron told regional newspaper Ouest-France yesterday that Paris and Washington had “an essential point of convergenc­e: fighting terrorism and protecting our vital interests”.

However, he also lamented “a protection­ist tendency [which] has resurfaced in the United States”.

“I want to defend free and fair trade,” he added.

But sources in the French presidency insist ties are healthy even after a muscular handshake seen as a battle of wills between the two of them when they first met at a Nato summit in May.

“The relationsh­ip is excellent,” said one member of Mr Macron’s team.

Nearly 11,000 police officers will be on duty, with France in its highest state of alert after a string of terror attacks since 2015 that have killed more than 300 people.

Early July, police charged a 23-year-old suspected far-right activist with plotting to assassinat­e Mr Macron at the Bastille Day parade.

 ?? AP ?? US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania arriving at Orly airport. President Trump will later meet with French President Emmanuel Macron.
AP US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania arriving at Orly airport. President Trump will later meet with French President Emmanuel Macron.

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