IN the Middle East, US President Donald Trump was feted with pageantry, the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Israel seemingly in competition to outdo the other with the warmth of their welcomes and the depth of their pledges of co-operation.
But in Europe, Mr Trump has faced a far cooler reception and has been eager to go on the offensive.
Cajoled on issues like climate change and NATO’s defence pact, he’s responded by scolding some of the United States’ most loyal allies for not paying their fair share. He’s also refused to explicitly back the mutual defence agreement that has been activated only once, during the darkest hours of September 2001.
Still, Mr Trump hailed the trip a success as he arrived to the G-7 summit in Sicily on Friday, the final stop of his maiden international trip, a gruelling nine-day, five-stop marathon.
“Getting ready to engage G7 leaders on many issues including economic growth, terrorism, and security,” Mr Trump wrote on Twitter. “Trip has been very successful. We made and saved the USA many billions of dollars and millions of jobs.”
Once more, he will likely be received warily, a president who ran on a campaign of “America First” with suggestions of disentangling the United States from international pacts, now engaged in two days of pomp and policy with the leaders of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada. Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said the group’s leaders “sometimes have very different views” on topics such as climate change and trade, “but our role as the EU is to do everything to maintain the unity of the G-7 on all fronts.”
The White House believes that Mr Trump has made personal breakthroughs with his peers, having now met one-on-one with all the leaders of G-7. “It’s time for him to have an intimate discussion and understand their issues but, more importantly, for them to understand our issues,” national economic adviser Gary Cohn told reporters on air force One late on Thursday.
GERMANY PUSHES BACK AGAINST TRADE TUMP COMMENTS
A German government spokesman says trade surpluses like the one that’s provoking Mr Trump’s ire are the result of market factors and are “neither good nor bad.” Spokesman Georg Streiter didn’t comment directly on a confirmed report that Mr Trump called Germany “bad, very bad” on trade because of the success of German companies in selling cars and other goods to US customers.
But, speaking in Berlin, Streiter said Germany’s current account surplus — the broadest measure of trade and investment flows — reflects economic factors that the German government can’t directly do anything about.
He said it was “also caused by factors that cannot, or at least cannot directly, be influenced by economic or financial policy measures in Germany, for example the oil price, the euro exchange rate, but also structural factors such as demographic developments.”
White House economic adviser Gary Cohn said Friday that Mr Trump did say Germans are “very bad on trade but he doesn’t have a problem with Germany.” He noted that Mr Trump’s father was born in Germany and said Mr Trump had told the leaders, “I don’t have a problem Germany, I have a problem with German trade.”
JUSTIN TRUDEAU AND MACRON LOOK ‘SO IN LOVE’
Fans dubbed Justin Trudeau and Emmanuel Macron “too hot to handle” when the politicians finally met for the first time.
Twitter users called the Canadian Prime Minister and French President the “most handsome world leaders” as they attended a G7 summit in Sicily, Italy, on Friday.
Excited fantasists said the liberal-left pair looked “so in love” as they strolled through ornate gardens and even suggested they star in a romantic comedy together.