logo
G7 leaders meet in Canada hoping to avoid Trump clash

G7 leaders meet in Canada hoping to avoid Trump clash

Reuters15-06-2025

BANFF, Alberta, June 15 (Reuters) - Group of Seven leaders gather in the Canadian Rockies starting on Sunday amid growing splits with the United States over foreign policy and trade, with host Canada striving to avoid clashes with President Donald Trump.
While Prime Minister Mark Carney says his priorities are strengthening peace and security, building critical mineral supply chains and creating jobs, issues such as U.S. tariffs and the conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine are expected to feature heavily.
U.S. ally Israel launched a barrage of strikes across Iran on Thursday, a blow to Trump's diplomatic efforts to prevent such an attack.
The summit will take place in the mountain resort of Kananaskis, some 90 km (56 miles) west of Calgary.
The last time Canada played host, in 2018, Trump left the summit before denouncing then Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as "very dishonest and weak" and instructing the U.S. delegation to withdraw its approval of the final communique.
"This will be a successful meeting if Donald Trump doesn't have an eruption that disrupts the entire gathering. Anything above and beyond that is gravy," said University of Ottawa international affairs professor Roland Paris, who was foreign policy adviser to Trudeau.
Trump has often mused about annexing Canada and arrives at a time when Carney is threatening reprisals if Washington does not lift tariffs on steel and aluminum.
"The best-case scenario ... is that there's no real blow-ups coming out of the back end," said Josh Lipsky, the chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council think tank and a former White House and State Department official.
Carney's office declined to comment on how the Israeli strikes would affect the summit.
Diplomats said Canada has ditched the idea of a traditional comprehensive joint communique and would issue chair summaries instead, in hopes of containing a disaster and maintaining engagement with the U.S.
A senior Canadian official told reporters Ottawa wanted to focus on actions the seven members - Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States - could take together.
Canadian Senator Peter Boehm, a veteran former diplomat who acted as Trudeau's personal representative to the 2018 summit, said he had been told the summit would last longer than usual to give time for bilateral meetings with the U.S. president.
Expected guests for parts of the Sunday to Tuesday event include leaders from Ukraine, Mexico, India, Australia, South Africa, South Korea and Brazil, who all have reasons to want to talk to Trump.
"Many will want to talk to President Trump about their own particular interests and concerns," Boehm said by phone.
A senior U.S. official said on Friday working discussions would cover trade and the global economy, critical minerals, migrant and drug smuggling, wildfires, international security, artificial intelligence and energy security.
"The president is eager to pursue his goals in all of these areas including making America's trade relationships fair and reciprocal," the official said.
The visit of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to the Oval Office in February descended into acrimony and has served as a warning for other world leaders about the delicate dance they face in negotiating with Trump.
But diplomats say the frustration of dealing with the Trump administration has made some keener to assert themselves.
Canada has long been one of Ukraine's most vocal supporters. Trump came to power promising to end the war with Russia within 24 hours but diplomatic efforts to end the conflict have stalled.
One Ukrainian official involved in preparations for the summit said hope had faded for a strong statement in support of Ukraine. Instead, success for Kyiv would merely constitute an amicable meeting between Trump and Zelenskiy.
A European official said the G7 summit and the NATO summit in The Hague later in June provided an opportunity to underscore to Trump the need to press ahead with a sanctions bill put together by U.S. senators alongside a new European package to pressure Russia into a ceasefire and broader talks.
Trump's first international summit will offer some early clues on whether Trump is interested in working with allies to solve common problems, said Max Bergmann, a director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
'The big overarching question here is, basically, is the United States still committed to formats like the G7? That is going to be the big test,' Bergmann said.
French President Emmanuel Macron has said he has a good, but frank relationship with Trump despite differences on subjects such as Ukraine or climate change.
Macron said on Friday that a United Nations conference co-hosted between France and Saudi Arabia scheduled after the G7 to work towards a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians has been postponed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC axes ‘anti-Semitic' broadcaster
BBC axes ‘anti-Semitic' broadcaster

Telegraph

time41 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

BBC axes ‘anti-Semitic' broadcaster

A journalist employed by the BBC has been accused of calling for Israel 'to be dismantled' and appearing to suggest that Jewish people 'are not meant to have a land'. Osman Ahmed has also been accused of mocking the Israeli victims of Iranian missile strikes by posting videos poking fun at people fleeing towards air raid shelters. The freelance reporter, who has previously worked for ITN and CNN as well as the BBC, has posted numerous items on social media commenting on the Gaza conflict since Oct 7 2023, when more than 1,200 Israelis were murdered by Hamas gunmen. He has made posts about the Iranian-Israeli war and has reposted several items on social media that have been described as virulently anti-Semitic. Following complaints to the BBC, the broadcaster said it would no longer employ Mr Hamed. 'Jewish people are actually not meant to have a land' One post shared on the London-based reporter's Instagram accounts showed a group of orthodox Jews from a fringe sect attempting to set fire to the flag of Israel with the comment: 'Yes, that's correct. Jewish people who truly understand their religion recognise that Israel is a terrorist state and Jewish people are actually not meant to have a land'. Another video posted on Mr Ahmed's Instagram with a sweating emoji showed airline passengers fleeing towards a shelter during a recent Iranian missile strike, with the caption: 'Chaos at Ben Gurion Airport as Israelis scramble to flee 'the promised land'.' Mr Ahmed, who recently worked as a producer on the World Service's Newsday and the BBC's breakfast radio show for listeners in Africa and Asia, has previously also worked for BBC Arabic, the corporation's Arabic language service. BBC Arabic has been repeatedly criticised for bias against Israel, amid claims that its contributors and presenters have displayed open anti-Semitism and have celebrated Oct 7 as 'armed resistance by the Palestinian people'. Another social media post on Mr Ahmed's account appeared to suggest Jews were to blame for the destruction of Gaza, juxtaposing a photograph of Jewish refugees arriving in Palestine ahead of the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 with the devastated ruins of Gaza following months of Israeli bombardment. Mr Ahmed responded to the announcement that Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, had decided to ban Palestine Action by sharing a comment stating, 'to learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticise'. 'Hateful tweets' The Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (Camera) said: 'In Ahmed's case, his hateful X tweets and Instagram stories – some posted right next to ones where he mentioned his BBC affiliation – were publicly available online in English for months. 'The national broadcaster's failure to act sooner raises serious questions about whether this was due to complicity or sheer incompetence.' The Israeli embassy in the UK had previously complained about what it described as Mr Ahmed's anti-Semitic social media posts when he was a contributor to BBC Arabic. Orly Goldschmidt, spokeswoman for the embassy, said: 'The BBC previously apologised to us for this journalist's actions while he was working with BBC Arabic. Osman [Ahmed] has continued to promote anti-Semitism as a representative of the BBC since.' A spokesman for the Board of Deputies of British Jews said: 'We are well aware of the problems at the BBC. While the corporation has made some progress in a number of areas, the pace of change has been, at times, painfully slow. The issue of anti-Semitism needs to be a top priority.' The BBC announced in May that it was launching an independent review of its Middle East coverage, its Arabic service and its broader handling of the Israel-Gaza conflict. In March, Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative Party leader, called for 'wholesale reform' of BBC Arabic, after a report by Camera accused it of 'appalling anti-Semitism and anti-Israel bias '. A BBC spokesman said: 'Osman Ahmed is a freelancer who is no longer engaged by the BBC. We will not be working with him again. We are clear there is no place for antisemitism on our services.'

Trump FINALLY gets a question he respects as president grins from ear-to-ear after big week on Wall Street
Trump FINALLY gets a question he respects as president grins from ear-to-ear after big week on Wall Street

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump FINALLY gets a question he respects as president grins from ear-to-ear after big week on Wall Street

Donald Trump gushed over a reporter's question about whether he 'outsmarted' the financial markets with his industry-shaking tariffs. The president grinned from ear-to-ear as a reporter asked him for his reaction to Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Sløk saying Trump may have 'outsmarted everyone' with his tariffs. 'Mr. President, a leading global economist just did a one-eighty and says your tariff plan, you may have outsmarted everybody with it. What is your message?' the reporter asked. Trump smiled as he responded: 'I love this. I love this question. This is the favorite. This is the best question I've ever been asked because I've been going through abuse for years on this. 'Because, as you know, we're taking in hundreds of billions of dollars, no inflation whatsoever.' The reporter added in a follow-up question for Trump's 'message to critics who think your tariff plan caused a recession?' 'I think they should go back to business school,' Trump responded. 'It's so obvious. It's so obvious. I mean, we're taking in billions and billions of dollars from China and a lot of other countries.' It came as Wall Street continued its recent rally this week, with the S&P500 and Nasdaq hitting all-time closing highs on Friday. In Sløk's report that Trump appeared to enjoy, the economist speculated that Trump would keep tariffs below his most aggressive rates to ease market uncertainty while using them as leverage to get better trade deals. 'Maybe the strategy is to maintain 30% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on all other countries and then give all countries 12 months to lower nontariff barriers and open up their economies to trade,' he wrote. The report came as Trump's 90-day pause on 'reciprocal tariffs' is set to come to an end early next month. Sløk said that Trump should consider extending the deadline to a whole year, which he said would give the global markets time to adjust to a 'new world with permanently higher tariffs.' 'This would seem like a victory for the world and yet would produce $400 billion of annual revenue for US taxpayers,' he said. 'Trade partners will be happy with only 10% tariffs and U.S. tax revenue will go up. 'Maybe the administration has outsmarted all of us.' Trump shocked the global markets in April as he introduced a raft of 'Liberation Day' tariffs, but the gamble may have paid off as markets soared in recent weeks and the US signed a number of trade deals with foreign nations The soaring stock market numbers came as trade deal hopes fueled investor risk appetite and economic data helped solidify expectations for rate cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve. The rise came even after Trump terminated trade negotiations with Canada in response to its digital tax on technology companies. 'This market's been pretty resilient,' said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana. 'Investors are riding momentum and looking for breakouts.' 'They don't want to get caught on the wrong side of this thing,' Carlson added. 'Many investors already have missed out. And now you have the S&P flirting with an all-time high.' While tariffs have yet to affect price growth, inflation continues to hover above the Fed's 2% annual inflation target. A separate report from the University of Michigan confirmed consumer sentiment has improved this month, but remains well below December's post-election bounce. Financial markets have priced in a 72% likelihood that the Fed will implement its first rate cut of the year in September, with a smaller, 21% probability of a rate cut coming as soon as July, according to CME's FedWatch tool. Washington and Beijing reached an agreement to expedite rare-earth shipments to the U.S., a White House official said, well ahead of the July 9 expiration of the 90-day postponement of U.S. President Donald Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs. Additionally, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Trump administration's trade deals with 18 of the main U.S. trading partners could be done by the September 1 Labor Day holiday.

Footage shows aftermath of Israeli strike on tent camp in Gaza City
Footage shows aftermath of Israeli strike on tent camp in Gaza City

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Footage shows aftermath of Israeli strike on tent camp in Gaza City

Palestinians in Gaza City searched for bodies and belongings after an Israeli strike on tents in the al-Rimal neighbourhood that killed at least 12 people and injured dozens, the Palestinian official news agency Wafa reported. At least 60 people have been killed by Israeli strikes across Gaza over the past 24 hours. Qatar's foreign ministry spokesperson said mediators were engaging with Israel and Hamas to build on momentum from Israel's ceasefire with Iran and work towards a truce in the Gaza Strip

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store