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Home / World

No shove, but Trump body language speaks to frosty relations

By Jonathan Lemire, Darlene Superville
Other·
11 Jul, 2018 09:35 PM5 mins to read

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and US President Donald Trump. Photos / AP

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and US President Donald Trump. Photos / AP

He didn't shove anyone this time, but US President Donald Trump's body language during Nato events today suggested his relationships with key US allies aren't exactly buddy-buddy.

Trump started the day with a tense breakfast meeting with Jens Stoltenberg in which he lectured the Nato leader about member defence spending and complained about a German pipeline deal with Russia. Arms crossed over his chest, Trump gestured at Stoltenberg and repeatedly interrupted the Secretary-General as he argued his case.

Trump's aides seated around the table, including chief of staff John Kelly and the US Ambassador to Nato, Kay Bailey Hutchison, looked visibly uncomfortable at points.

Their subsequent encounters at Nato headquarters were formal and less strained as they twice shook hands and chatted in front of journalists. But those moments were more perfunctory than Stoltenberg's chattier introductions with other leaders, many of whom Stoltenberg was seeing for the first time that day after he had spent part of the morning hosting Trump.

World leader summits are largely about optics and presenting a united front to the rest of the world. But Trump barrelled into his second Nato summit, as he did his first, with a litany of public complaints about alliance members' "delinquent" defence spending, as well as a German-Russian gas pipeline deal.

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Showing unity seemed an afterthought for the "America First" president. And it showed.

During moments that were visible to the press, Trump often separated himself from most of his counterparts, particularly those with whom he has had public disagreements, such as British Prime Minister Theresa May, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Canada's Justin Trudeau.

When the leaders strolled out of the gleaming Nato building in Brussels for the traditional family photo in the courtyard, Trump lingered behind and mostly spoke with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic.

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On the dais, he and May chatted as they stood together, but Trump kept his back towards other leaders, including Merkel.

After the group moved inside for talks, Trump again hung back as other heads of state glad-handed around the room. He stayed close to members of his delegation, including Defence Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, before eventually engaging in a brief round of backslapping with others, including again May, before taking his seat.

US President Donald Trump with British Prime Minister Theresa May.
US President Donald Trump with British Prime Minister Theresa May.
US President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, as French President Emmanuel Macron looks on.
US President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, as French President Emmanuel Macron looks on.
Croatian President Kalinda Grabar-Kitarovic with US President Donald Trump.
Croatian President Kalinda Grabar-Kitarovic with US President Donald Trump.

Trump has harshly criticised May, Merkel and Trudeau since taking office and opened the day with another broadside against Merkel, asserting that her country is "totally controlled" and "captive" to Russia as he objected to a deal to bring Russian natural gas directly to Germany.

Merkel pushed back, insisting that Germany makes its own decisions. When the two met later, Trump told reporters: "We have a very, very good relationship with the Chancellor."

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The comment illustrated how Trump often seeks to avoid conflict with people when he is face to face with them versus the often-harsher rhetoric he uses when he's talking behind their back. Merkel was not present at Trump's breakfast with Stoltenberg.

When it was her turn to address reporters in the room for the meeting with Trump, Merkel made no similar declaration about her relationship with Trump.

The two barely looked at each other during the few minutes journalists were allowed in the room.

That was in stark contrast to Trump's subsequent meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron.

The Frenchman is one of Trump's closest friends on the world stage despite their many areas of disagreement, including Trump's decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris climate accord, and to impose tariffs on France and other European countries.

In honor of Trump’s upcoming NATO summit, a highlight from last year’s meeting. pic.twitter.com/tpZbLLMbpw

— ian bremmer (@ianbremmer) July 10, 2018

Trump and Macron bantered easily during their joint photo op, with Trump calling it "an honour to be with a friend of mine." The two also chatted each other up as Macron walked Trump out of the Nato building at the end of the day.

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Arriving at a dinner hosted by the Belgian Government at the Art and History Museum at the Cinquantenaire, Trump appeared to be in a more social mood.

The President, who doesn't drink alcohol, huddled during the cocktail reception with Stoltenberg for several minutes, before being joined by Merkel for an animated discussion. As Trump spoke again to Erdogan, his wife, Melania, was greeted warmly by Trudeau.

At last year's Nato summit, tongues wagged after Trump appeared to shove Prime Minister Dusko Markovic of Montenegro to get to the front of the group as leaders entered the alliance's new headquarters building.

Markovic later characterised the incident as "a completely harmless event."

President Trump routinely characterizes NATO countries' defense commitments as if they were a bill owed to the United States. In fact, they are simply a pledge by each country to invest in its own defense.https://t.co/h5xQchgdrE

— NPR (@NPR) July 11, 2018

President Trump is stirring things up in Brussels at the NATO summit. pic.twitter.com/NegSOa5Ijt

— No Spin News (@NoSpinNews) July 11, 2018

Shep Smith: Trump attacks on NATO could "turn back the global clock centuries" https://t.co/YkPhThNmNN pic.twitter.com/0Ies5qbwSO

— The Hill (@thehill) July 11, 2018

Bilateral Breakfast with NATO Secretary General in Brussels, Belgium... pic.twitter.com/l0EP3lzhCM

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 11, 2018

- AP

ABOUT NATO

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Who are the leaders of NATO? Here's a closer look at the organization https://t.co/CLoqk8EXiC pic.twitter.com/cRk6wtFPWr

— Newsweek (@Newsweek) July 11, 2018

Military spending of select NATO countries

US $686bn, 3.6% of GDP
UK $55bn, 2.1%
France $46bn, 1.8%
Germany $45bn, 1.2%
Italy $23bn, 1.1%
Canada $21bn, 1.3%
Turkey $12bn, 1.5%
Spain $12bn, 0.9%
Norway $7bn, 1.6%
Belgium $4bn, 0.9%

NATO

— ian bremmer (@ianbremmer) July 11, 2018

How people in NATO countries view the alliance. #NATOSummit

Want more? Sign up for Signal for the latest global politics news and analysis: https://t.co/Tq3mijSIEz pic.twitter.com/XZk8vKkqIX

— GZERO Media (@gzeromedia) July 11, 2018
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