
Trump renews embrace of Putin amid ongoing rift with allies
US
president
Donald Trump
could have opened by talking about trade. He could have discussed the wars in the
Middle East
or the long-running, brutal
war in Ukraine
.
But there was something else that appeared to be top of mind for Trump during Monday's meeting in Canada of the leaders of the
Group of 7
industrialised nations: president
Vladimir Putin
of Russia.
'The G7 used to be the G8,' Trump told reporters, referring to the group's decision to eject Russia in 2014, after it attacked Ukraine and 'annexed' Crimea, a prelude to its full-scale invasion.
He went on to blame former president
Barack Obama
and former prime minister
Justin Trudeau
of Canada for kicking Russia out, and argued that its inclusion in the group would have averted the war in Ukraine. (Trump was wrong – it was not Trudeau, but rather Stephen Harper, who was the Canadian prime minister at the time of Russia's expulsion.)
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Iran and Israel broaden attacks as Trump urges 'everyone' to evacuate Tehran
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'I would say that was a mistake,' Trump said, 'because I think you wouldn't have a war right now'.
And with that, Trump's troubled history with the alliance repeated itself. When he attended the summit the last time it was held in Canada, in 2018, he called for Russia to be readmitted to the alliance. The suggestion angered and appalled allies, setting off a rift that before Trump left the summit early, telling reporters on his way out: 'They should let Russia come back in. Because we should have Russia at the negotiating table.'
Trump's remarks came one day before he was supposed to meet in Canada with Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskiy
, whom Trump has repeatedly criticised for the invasion of his country and has even accused of not wanting the war to end.
The White House announced Monday that Trump would leave the summit early and return to Washington to deal with the war between Israel and Iran. In a recent interview, Trump said he was open to having Putin serve as a mediator in the Middle East conflict.
Trump's argument was even more remarkable given that he returned to the summit three years after Russia escalated the aggression that got it ejected in the first place – launching an unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in 2022, with similar goals of seizing its territory.
The scene on Monday illustrated how even more aligned Trump has grown with the Russian autocrat since his first time in office, and how alienated Trump has become from US allies who have rallied around Ukraine.
Asked about Trump's decision to open his remarks at the summit by criticising Putin's expulsion from the bloc, a White House official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said Trump had long held that view and would share his opinion even if he were meeting global leaders who feel differently.
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G7 leaders aim for unity as Ukraine and Middle East wars add to global uncertainty
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Trump, in his remarks Monday, repeated a claim he made in 2018, that the Group of 7 needed Putin to help solve some of the world's problems – including ones the Russian leader himself caused. 'You spend so much time talking about Russia, and he's no longer at the table,' Trump said.
John Bolton, Trump's former national security adviser, said Trump's multiple calls for Russia to rejoin the alliance indicated his lack of knowledge about the history of the bloc. Bolton accompanied Trump to the 2018 summit, where a memorable photo emerged of Trump seated across from other world leaders with his arms folded in defiance.
'Never seemed to understand that Russia had been kicked out of the G8 for invading Ukraine,' Bolton said. He said Trump also could not comprehend that the partnership 'was a group of like-minded industrial democracies. Apparently, still doesn't understand.'
On Monday, Trump eventually issued statements and answered questions on Iran and trade. But he began by boasting about his close relationship with Putin.
'Putin speaks to me; he doesn't speak to anybody else,' Trump said, 'because he was very insulted when he got thrown out at the G8, as I would be, as you would be, as anybody would be.'
Trump has spoken with Putin regularly, as recently as Saturday, when he said that the Russian leader had called him to wish him a 'Happy Birthday' and spent more time discussing the Iranian-Israeli conflict than the war he started.
'Our G7 partners are likely to conclude that Trump may be more interested in rehabilitating Putin rather than joining the consensus supporting Ukraine,' said Daniel M. Price, who worked on international trade and investment during the Bush administration.
Trump's embrace – and sometimes outright defence – of Putin in his second term has thus far done little to quell the war, which he said on the campaign trail he could end in one day. He has also acknowledged that Putin may be taking advantage of him by dragging out the war.
As Russia has escalated its incursion into Ukraine, Trump has repeatedly threatened tariffs against Russia, though he has yet to follow through.
At the same time, UK prime minister Keir Starmer , along with other European leaders, was expected to use the summit to announce another sanctions package against Russia. Starmer said in a statement that he wanted to 'work with all of our G7 partners to squeeze Russia's energy revenues and reduce the funds they are able to pour into their illegal war.'
Asked after a meeting with Starmer on Monday if the United States would join Europe in applying further sanctions, Trump downplayed the measure.
'Well, Europe is saying that, but they haven't done it yet,' he said. 'Let's see them do it first.'
Trump said he was still waiting to see if a ceasefire deal could be made, adding that sanctions would also be costly for the United States. 'It's not just, let's sign a document,' he said. 'You're talking about billions and billions of dollars. Sanctions are not that easy. It's not just a one-way street.'
Trump, in recent months, has also indicated that he wants to all but wash his hands of the war in Ukraine, having grown frustrated by the lack of progress in negotiating a peace deal.
Experts said Trump's comments on Monday about welcoming Russia back into the fold of leading industrialised countries made clear his shifting goalpost for the war.
'To make that particular point I think cuts to the core of the recent most successful actions the G7 has taken,' said Josh Lipsky, the senior director for the Atlantic Council's Geoeconomics Center. 'It puts the summit in a G6 plus one dynamic right off the bat.'
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times
.
2025 The New York Times Company

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Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
The Irish Times view on the G7 summit: tensions in the foreground
Donald Trump's abrupt early departure from the G7 meeting in Canada was not reassuring. He was heading back to Washington to preoccupy himself with the Iran/Israel conflict, we were told, but decidedly not to broker a ceasefire. Iran was already losing, he said, and he wanted a 'real end' to the crisis with Tehran 'giving up entirely' on its nuclear programme. Ceasefire, no, he wrote on social media, 'something much bigger than that'. Speaking on Air Force One he made clear that Israel was not giving up its bombing campaign. It might go on for weeks. And he warned the 10 million population of Tehran to evacuate. No question of urging restraint on Israel's prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu. It is being widely reported that while Israel has now inflicted massive damage on Iran's nuclear programme, its oil and gas infrastructure, its chain of military command , and now has control of Tehran's air space, it does not have the capacity to destroy the nuclear laboratories and refined uranium stocks stored deep underground. For some time Netanyahu has been pleading with Trump to finish the job by using the US 30,000lb 'bunker buster' bombs delivered by its B2 bombers. To date Washington has confined its support to defensive air cover to protect Israel from Iranian drones and missiles – an offensive attack on Iran's bunkers would constitute a major, dangerous escalation by the US and risk triggering a still wider regional conflagration. Trump's hints at 'something much bigger' may be just that, but need to be strongly repudiated by the international community. His calls yesterday evening for Iran's 'unconditional surrender' and the movement of more US military aircraft to the region increased speculation of direct US involvement. READ MORE Before leaving the G7, the US president grudgingly signed a joint statement calling for a resolution of the conflict and a 'broader de-escalation' in the Middle East. It is hard to see, however, how continued, uncritical political and economic support by the US for Israel's offensives in Iran and Gaza is in any way conducive to such de-escalation. The G7 joint statement, while urging restraint, is unambiguous that the world's major economic powers stand with Israel. It describes Iran as 'the principal source of regional instability and terror', implicitly acknowledging that Israel, which has 'a right to defend itself', has some justification for its attacks. 'Iran can never have a nuclear weapon,' it says. Israel has legitimate fears over Iran's nuclear programme. But instead of ratcheting up the level of violence in the region, endlessly feeding the arguments of its enemies, it must be prevailed on by its friends internationally to return to diplomacy and reconciliation as the best way to protect itself and ensure a stable Middle East. That is the message that the G7 should have been sending.


Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
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Irish Examiner
7 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
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