G7 braces for Trump as allies head to France expecting turbulence

WASHINGTON, June 13 β Little is known about what President Donald Trump hopes to achieve at next weekβs G7 summit in Evian, France, beyond one certainty: the US president is likely to set the tone β and perhaps the agenda.
Much may depend on the outcome of peace talks involving Iran, which appeared to be gaining momentum on Friday.
βIt is not possible to βmanage Trumpβ the way it has been possible during his first term,β Liana Fix, an associate fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, told AFP ahead of the summit.
The gathering will bring Trump face-to-face with the leaders of France, Germany, Canada, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom.
Most of those leaders have at some point been targets of Trumpβs trade threats, diplomatic pressure or public criticism, with the notable exception of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, whom he is known to admire.
βExpect the worstβ
Neither Trumpβs declining approval ratings nor the US Supreme Courtβs decision to strike down his blanket tariffs is expected to soften his approach towards allies.
European leaders, in particular, have learned through disputes over Greenland, trade and the Iran conflict βto hope for the best but to expect the worstβ, Fix said.
The US has also informed European partners of plans to significantly reduce the number of aircraft and warships committed to Nato operations in Europe, according to a New York Times report.
βI donβt think youβre going to see a weakened president,β Jackson James, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the US, told AFP.
βI think heβs going to go over there and do what he always does, which is just try to bully his way through these very, very complicated issues and try to get the American agenda, as he sees it, fulfilled.β
Trump βsays he doesnβt like these multilateral meetingsβ, but βcannot bear for an assembly of world leaders to meet and he not being thereβ, said Victor Cha of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
βSo he shows up at these things and he leaves early,β Cha said, referring to Trumpβs behaviour at previous summits.
Versailles charm offensive
French President Emmanuel Macron is reportedly hoping to persuade Trump to stay for a dinner at Versailles on Wednesday evening, appealing to the US leaderβs fondness for grandeur and ceremony.
France has already adjusted the summit dates so they do not clash with Trumpβs 80th birthday celebrations or a mixed martial arts event he is due to host at the White House.
Some analysts also see the absence of South Africa from the summit guest list as a gesture towards Washington.
Paris has denied any pressure to withdraw an invitation to South Africa, which Trump has repeatedly accused β without evidence β of discriminating against its white population.
Analysts say one topic likely to attract Trumpβs attention is trade relations with China.
Ukraine dynamics shift
The balance of power has also evolved on the issue of Ukraine, where Europe is no longer viewed as being as dependent on Washington as it was a year ago.
In 2025, βEuropeans just sort of agreed that they had to bend the knee to Trump because of Ukraineβ and its need for US military support, said Max Bergmann, a Europe expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
βBut now weβre just in a different dynamic where Ukraine is not as dependent on the United States.β
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been invited to participate in discussions in Evian, setting the stage for another potentially high-stakes encounter with Trump. β AFP
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