
Trump's slapdown diplomacy reduces Oval Office meetings to spectator sport
America
has a new spectator sport: it's unruly, made for prime time, and the venue is the Oval Office.
In Wednesday's bout, President
Donald Trump
was in the red corner, facing off against his
South African
counterpart
Cyril Ramaphosa
. The guest had come for talks about trade and investment. He found himself in the diplomatic equivalent of an arm and head choke.
Trump hectored him over debunked claims that white South African farmers are being killed in large numbers and kicked off their land – claims Ramaphosa rejected. The US president even dimmed the lights to show a montage of video clips purporting to show violence against whites. Ramaphosa quietly pointed out that most victims of crime in South Africa were black.
Experts are still trying to figure out what the latest Oval Office ambush means for America's foreign relations.
READ MORE
'It doesn't exactly encourage people to want to come and sit down with Trump – who knows how they're going to be treated?' John Bolton, who served as Trump's national security adviser in his first term, told the Financial Times. 'I think it's counter-productive.'
That could have profound implications for Trump's future dealings with leaders such as Chinese president
Xi Jinping
, who would want to avoid such a public altercation at all costs.
'This has got to reinforce Xi's existing concerns about having unscripted moments with foreign leaders,' said Stephen Wertheim, a historian of American foreign policy at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
It wasn't the first time Trump had publicly upbraided a visiting dignitary.
Ukrainian
president
Volodymyr Zelenskiy
was subjected to a similar tongue-lashing in February,
berated
by Trump and
JD Vance
for failing to show enough gratitude to the US, in a bruising encounter that raised fears of a full rupture between the two allies.
Such public rows are a gift for
Moscow
and
Beijing
, who see them as undermining the US's international prestige, say experts. American soft power has already been harmed by the dismantling of USAID, the US agency for international development, which led to the closure of hundreds of life-saving health programmes around the world.
'Engagements like that are making China's point for it,' said Michelle Gavin, senior fellow for Africa policy studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. 'They have lent credence to China's talking point that it's a reliable partner.'
'Champagne corks will be popping in Russia and China,' said Christoph Heusgen, who served as national security adviser to former
German
chancellor
Angela Merkel
. 'The US is going to massively lose influence in the world as a result of incidents like this.'
America's international standing is already in decline. According to the latest Democracy Perception Index survey, conducted in April, the share of countries with a positive image of the US is now 45 per cent, down from 76 per cent last year.
The perception of Trump was also negative in 82 of the 100 countries surveyed. By contrast, Russian president
Vladimir Putin
was viewed negatively in 61 countries and Xi Jinping in only 44. 'This spectacle in the Oval Office will only contribute to the [US's] unpopularity,' said Wertheim.
The new version of diplomatic mixed martial arts taking place in the Oval Office grew from humble origins. Photo ops there were always modest affairs, with the president and his guest shaking hands and exchanging platitudes for five to 10 minutes before wranglers ushered out the press pool and the action moved to the Cabinet Room.
Trump has shuffled the cards. The photo ops are now attended by senior cabinet members, including Vance, as well as the full gamut of Maga media, and have turned into full-scale press conferences, which the president visibly enjoys. 'The entire royal court's there now,' said Bolton.
During his first term, Trump rarely criticised his guests publicly, limiting himself to small gestures of disdain, such as refusing to shake hands with Merkel for the TV cameras in 2017. But, as the encounters with Zelenskiy and Ramaphosa show, the president's appetite for a full public takedown has only grown.
He has also used the photo ops to heap praise on politicians who are aligned with his ideological agenda, such as President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, whom he personally thanked for helping with his campaign to deport illegal immigrants.
Some world leaders have been able to parry Trump's verbal attacks. At a meeting in the White House in February with
French
president
Emmanuel Macron
, Trump claimed that the EU was 'loaning the money to Ukraine [and] they'll get their money back'.
Macron placed his hand on Trump's arm and contradicted him. 'No, in fact, to be frank, we paid 60 per cent of the total effort ... We provided real money, to be clear.'
Mark Carney
, the newly elected Canadian prime minister, also used his White House appearance to firmly reject Trump's claim on
Canada
, saying: 'There are some places that are never for sale.' Trump got the last word, however, launching into a tirade about how the US was paying for the lion's share of Canada's defence.
But the encounter with Ramaphosa was, for many observers, simply puzzling. The US and South Africa had much to discuss: trade and investment, the future of Brics, the G20 summit that's being held in Johannesburg in November.
Instead Trump became fixated on
false claims of a genocide against white Afrikaner farmers
.
Bolton questioned whether the claims had been vetted by US experts on South Africa – who would doubtless have cast doubt on their validity – ahead of the meeting.
'If not, what does that tell the other leaders of the world that sheer propaganda, if it sinks into Trump's brain, suddenly becomes what he talks about in public to the head of a foreign government?' he said. − Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
6 hours ago
- Irish Independent
David W Higgins: If Ireland can remove all involvement with Israel, why wouldn't Israel do the same to us?
If Ireland can remove all involvement with Israel, why wouldn't it do the same to us? The Trump trade war continues. The EU has joined China with a 90-day reprieve. A burst of dealmaking is unfolding behind the scenes. Exporters are continuing to count the fallout. Everyone has more questions than answers. While chaos is to the fore, a less talked-about budget bill is progressing through US Congress. Section 899 of that bill has raised eyebrows. It allows the US to impose up to 20pc taxes on countries it deems to have unfairly taxed American companies. This could be levied on dividends or interest as they exit the US. It gives a new tool to Donald Trump.


Irish Independent
6 hours ago
- Irish Independent
OECD warns Irish Government to keep lid on ‘surging public spending'
"Looming risks warrant greater fiscal prudence," the report says in relation to Ireland. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has 38 member states, including Ireland, and acts as a think tank to promote international trade and prosperity. The report stops well short of calling for a return to austerity, but says Ireland needs to prioritise spending and focus on investment that delivers for the economy long term – including housing – and better target spending in general. Figures earlier this year from the Department of Finance showed that Government spending in 2025 was up 50pc on pre-Covid-19 levels thanks to increases under the previous Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil-dominated coalition. The two parties have since returned to power. 'Higher investment in housing, transport and energy infrastructure is essential to maintain foreign investor confidence and preserve living standards,' the report says. That investment should be scheduled to avoid causing a surge in prices, it says. 'Additionally, greater emphasis should be placed on improving spending efficiency – supported by comprehensive spending reviews, stricter domestic fiscal guard-rails, and better-targeted income support where needed,' it says. Windfall corporation taxes should continue to be allocated to the long-term savings funds, it says. Given the nature of the economy, Ireland is especially exposed to the threat from a US trade war, the report warns. The OECD is forecasting a significant slow down in economic growth here; with modified domestic demand predicted to slow to 2.2pc this year and 2.1pc in 2026 – both well below the long-term average. The budget surplus is expected to narrow, though not close. Tariff-related concerns are expected to weigh on consumers, even with strong jobs and wage data, while the export sector and multinationals are heavily exposed to any hit to US trade. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth is projected to be 3.7pc in 2025, slowing to 2.3pc next year as trade fragmentation weighs on export-oriented sectors. Uncertainty will encourage households to save more and spend less. While the Government is expected to have less money at its disposal than in recent years, the report calls for higher investment in housing, transport and energy infrastructure. With labour shortages in many sectors it suggests boosting incentives in the tax and benefit system, alongside improving the supply of quality vocational pathways into skilled work. Meanwhile, the OECD is forecasting that the US economy will see growth slow further to just 1.5pc in 2026. Donald Trump's policies have raised average US tariff rates from around 2.5pc when he returned to the White House to 15.4pc, the highest since 1938, according to the report. World economic growth will slow to 2.9pc this year and stay there in 2026, according to the forecast. That is well down on global growth of 3.3pc last year and 3.4pc in 2023. Without mentioning Mr Trump by name, OECD chief economist Alvaro Pereira wrote in a commentary accompanying the forecast: "We have seen a significant increase in trade barriers as well as in economic and trade policy uncertainty. This sharp rise in uncertainty has negatively impacted business and consumer confidence and is set to hold back trade and investment.'' China – the world's second-biggest economy – is forecast to see growth slow from 5pc last year to 4.7pc in 2025 and 4.3pc in 2026. Euro area growth is tipped to accelerate, however, up from 0.8pc last year to 1pc in 2025 and 1.2pc next year, in part thanks to rate cuts from the European Central Bank.


Extra.ie
6 hours ago
- Extra.ie
J1 visa applicants urged to 'tread lightly' amid private social media account warning
The Trump administration is set to 'escalate' its visa vetting process, with a new pilot programme that will require applicants to hand over all of their social media handles for the past five years and require all visa applicants to set all their social media accounts to public. A new cable obtained by CBS News, the US State Department, could have serious consequences for J1 Visa applicants considering heading to the States this summer, as it was preparing to expand social media screening and vetting. The cable instructs US consular officers to ask visa applicants to set all their social media accounts to public in the event that they need to be reviewed as part of the vetting. US President Donald Trump. Pic:The agency did not specify exactly what type of content it would be looking for. The new vetting measures will build upon a previous statement issued last month from United States Citizenship and Immigration Services announcing that the agency will be taking into account 'antisemitic activity on social media' as 'grounds for denying immigration benefit requests.' And purging or deleting media presence in its entirety could also be grounds for refusal. Harvard University. Pic: RICK FRIEDMAN/AFP via Getty Images The cable explicitly states the State Department also instructed officers to 'consider whether the lack of any online presence, or having social media accounts restricted to 'private' or with limited visibility, may be reflective of evasiveness and call into question the applicant's credibility.' The new stepped-up social media scrutiny policy comes as Donald Trump continues to crack down on anyone deemed as subversive or expressing anti-American or anti-Semitic opinions, with students in particular being advised to 'tread lightly' with their online footprint. 'President Trump will always put the safety of Americans first, and it is a privilege, not a right, to study in the United States,' White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said in a statement. 'Enhanced social media vetting is a commonsense measure that will help ensure that guests in our country are not planning to harm Americans, which is a national security priority.' The new intensified visa vetting program is set to be targeted initially at foreign students attempting to enrol at the Ivy League University of Harvard, but is expected to be rolled out to anyone applying for a US visa. Last week, US Secretary of State Marc Rubio ordered US Embassies worldwide to pause any new visa interviews as it intensifies its visa entry policies across the globe.