Trump calls for Russia to be reinstated at the G7 bloc

We should have Moscow at the negotiating table, says the U.S. President

June 08, 2018 09:35 pm | Updated December 01, 2021 06:03 am IST - La Malbaie

 US President Donald Trump walks to Air Force One prior to his departure for Canada from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, on June 8, 2018.

US President Donald Trump walks to Air Force One prior to his departure for Canada from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, on June 8, 2018.

Donald Trump made a shock call on Friday for Russia to be readmitted into the G7 as he headed for a showdown with America’s closest allies at a summit set to be dominated by a roiling trade dispute.

Mr. Trump was to be the last Group of Seven leader to arrive in Canada for the two-day summit, and on Saturday, he will probably be the first to leave, in a hurry to move on to his nuclear summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un in Singapore.

But battlelines were drawn even before he arrived, in a series of duelling tweets and statements between Mr. Trump and his former friend President Emmanuel Macron of France over Washington’s imposition of tariffs on imports from U.S. allies.

And Mr. Trump caused more eyebrows to be raised by telling reporters that he wanted Russia — which was expelled from the group of the world’s most industrialised nations after annexing Crimea — to be brought back into the fold.

"They threw Russia out. They should let Russia come back"

“They threw Russia out. They should let Russia come back in because we should have Russia at the negotiating table,” he said before boarding Air Force One.

With unmistakable symbolism, the fractious Western democracies were meeting on the same day that China’s President Xi Jinping welcomed his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to Beijing and awarded him a friendship medal.

Three decades after the end of the Cold War, the G7 nations are split over trade, climate and multilateral engagements such as the Iran nuclear deal, and the U.S. President seems more at home with autocrats than with Washington’s traditional allies.

The ‘America First’ President’s broadsides before leaving Washington reinforced predictions that the G7 summit in Quebec might be the first such get-together to end without an agreed joint statement. “All of these countries have been taking advantage of the United States on trade,” he said before flying out.

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