Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Ramadan 17, 1445 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
23°C / 23°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

‘Beautiful harmony’: Trump plays nice in public at divisive G20

1253325
1253325
minus
plus

OSAKA: US President Donald Trump on Friday struck a conciliatory tone with fellow world leaders at one of the most high-stakes G20 meetings in years, despite deep divisions on trade and climate change.


Host Shinzo Abe, the Japanese prime minister, appealed for unity among bickering world leaders at the start of Japan’s new era of “Reiwa” or “beautiful harmony”, with the long-running trade row between China and the United States threatening to overshadow the event.


“With your help, I hope we will realise beautiful harmony in Osaka... rather than highlight our confrontations, let us seek out what unites us,” said Abe.


The appeal seemed to have chimed with arguably the club’s most volatile member, as Trump dialled down his previously feisty rhetoric against traditional US allies.


Fresh from describing Germany as “delinquent” for not paying enough into the Nato budget, he was effusive when meeting Chancellor Angela Merkel.


“She’s a fantastic person, a fantastic woman and I’m glad to have her as a friend,” he said. Merkel appeared well during the talks, a day after a second public shaking attack raised fears about her health. German officials insist she is not ill.


Likewise, Trump hailed Abe, for sending “many automobile companies” to the United States, apparently heartened by a document Abe gave him showing investment into the US.


Only two days earlier, he had seemed to question the US-Japan alliance, saying that Washington was committed to protecting Japan but if America was attacked, the Japanese could just “watch it on a Sony television”.


World leaders mingled and greeted each other during the family photo with French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker whispering extensively into Trump’s ear.


Trump entered with President Vladimir Putin, chatting amicably, and the Russian leader patted his American counterpart gently on the back as they parted ways.


The pair met later for the first face-to-face talks since Helsinki in July with Trump hailing a “very, very good relationship”.


The amicable meeting came after Putin in an interview with the Financial Times declared that the “liberal idea has become


obsolete”, a view that met with strong pushback from EU President Donald Tusk.


“What I find really obsolete are authoritarianism, personality cults, the rule of oligarchs,” Tusk said at a briefing in Osaka.


Putin later received a broadside from British prime minister Theresa May who said normal relations would not be restored until Moscow ends its “irresponsible and destabilising” activity.


It was their first formal face-to-face since the poisoning in the English city of Salisbury of former spy Sergei Skripal last year that plunged ties into the deep freeze. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon