The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Trump dashes hopes of unity among G7

US president calls for Russia to be brought in from the cold – while trade tariffs row rumbles on

- David hughes

Donald Trump has dealt another blow to G7 unity after calling for Russia to be readmitted to the group – a call rejected by Theresa May.

The Prime Minister said Vladimir Putin’s Russia – thrown out of the group of leading industrial­ised nations in 2014 – should not be readmitted until it could demonstrat­e a change of course.

Mr Trump was already at odds with the rest of the group – the UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan – over the imposition of tariffs on steel and aluminium.

His comments on Russia – backed by Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte – added further to the tensions at the summit in La Malbaie in Canada.

Mr Trump said: “Russia should be in the meeting, should be a part of it.”

But Mrs May told the BBC: “We should remind ourselves why the G8 became the G7, it was because Russia illegally annexed Crimea.

“We have seen malign activity from Russia in a whole variety of ways, of course including on the streets of Salisbury in the UK.

“So we need to say, I think, before any such conversati­ons can take place Russia needs to change its approach.”

The prime minister has been at the forefront of diplomatic efforts to build an alliance against Russia after the Salisbury nerve agent attack on ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

At the G7 summit Mrs May was holding formal face-to-face talks with all of the other leaders – except Mr Trump.

The US president is expected to depart the two-day summit early today, leaving the rest of the group behind.

But the prime minister twice refused to say whether she had requested a formal bilateral meeting with Mr Trump.

The US leader fired off a series of messages on Twitter hitting out at his counterpar­ts before the summit even opened.

He said the summit was an opportunit­y for “straighten­ing out unfair trade deals” with the rest of the G7 – adding “if it doesn’t happen, we come out even better”.

But before the summit had even begun Mr Trump was engaged in an extraordin­ary public spat with Canada’s Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Mr Macron stressed that the US was isolated.

Mr Trump posted a series of messages on Twitter, accusing the EU and Canada of imposing “massive trade tariffs and non-monetary trade barriers” against the US.

The US has refused to exempt its allies from the 25% tariff on steel imports and the 10% duty on aluminium.

The EU members of the G7 had a special meeting in the margins of the summit to discuss tariffs and the Iran nuclear deal, which Mr Trump also opposes.

We have seen malign activity from Russia in a whole variety of ways, of course including on the streets of Salisbury in the UK. THERESA MAY

 ?? Picture: AP. ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with US President Donald Trump during the family photo at the G7 summit yesterday in Charlevoix, Canada.
Picture: AP. German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with US President Donald Trump during the family photo at the G7 summit yesterday in Charlevoix, Canada.
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