This Article is From Jul 13, 2017

Donald Trump, Escaping Domestic Troubles, Visits France's Emmanuel Macron

Weeks after Macron hosted Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Palace of Versailles, Trump will bask in the trappings of the Bastille Day military parade on Friday and commemorations of the entry 100 years ago of US troops into World War One.

Donald Trump, Escaping Domestic Troubles, Visits France's Emmanuel Macron

Donald Trump arrived at the France airport today for his two-day visit to France (Reuters)

Paris: US President Donald Trump, under fire at home over Russian connections and abroad over climate change and trade, arrived in Paris today seeking common ground with France's new leader Emmanuel Macron.

After a bumpy start to relations, the two men both have incentives to improve ties - Macron hoping to elevate France's role in global affairs, and Trump, seemingly isolated among world leaders, needing a friend overseas.

Trump comes to France beset by allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US election. Emails released on Tuesday suggest his eldest son welcomed Russian help against his father's Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Weeks after Macron hosted Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Palace of Versailles, Trump will bask in the trappings of the Bastille Day military parade on Friday and commemorations of the entry 100 years ago of US troops into World War One.

Talks will focus on shared diplomatic and military endeavours, but an Elysee official said Macron would not shy away from trickier issues. Trump has made few friends in Europe with his rejection of the Paris accord on climate change and "America First" trade stance.

Macron's aides say he does not want Trump to feel backed into a corner.

"What Emmanuel Macron wants to do is bring Trump back into the circle so that the United States, which remains the world's number one power, is not excluded," French government spokesman Christophe Castaner told BFM TV.

On his arrival in Paris, Trump headed straight to the US ambassador's residence where he will lunch with top US military brass before meeting Macron at the Hotel des Invalides, a grand 17th century complex where Napoleon Bonaparte and other war heroes are buried.

They will later dine with their wives at a restaurant on the second floor of Paris' Eiffel Tower. The Elysee official said the symbolism was clear: "Paris is still Paris."

During the US election campaign, Trump declared that a wave of militant attacks showed "France is no longer France", urging the French to get tough on immigration and terrorists.

COUNTER-TERRORISM

This year's July 14 celebrations come a year after a Tunisian man loyal to ISIS ploughed a truck through a crowd of revellers on a seafront promenade in the Riviera city of Nice, killing more than 80 people.

A White House official on Tuesday said Trump and Macron would discuss the civil war in Syria, where ISIS is defending its last major urban stronghold of Raqqa, and counter-terrorism.

For Macron, France's youngest leader since Napoleon two centuries ago, the visit is a chance to use soft diplomacy to win Trump's confidence and set about influencing US foreign policy, which European leaders say lacks direction.

"I have no doubt that the presidents will talk about the state of military actions in Syria and they will talk about the future," the Elysee official said.

"Macron has said before that military action is not enough, we have to plan for development and stabilisation."

Beyond Syria and the Middle East, the Elysee said Macron would also press Trump for more support in financing a new West African military force to battle Islamic terrorists in the Sahel, where France wants to wind down its troop presence.

In bringing Trump to Paris, Macron has stolen a march on Britain's embattled Prime Minister Theresa May.

London's offer of a state visit for Trump met fierce criticism and warnings that he would be greeted by mass protests.

An Elabe poll showed that 59 percent of French people approved of Macron's decision to invite Trump.

(Additional reporting by Michel Rose; editing by Andrew Roche and Gareth Jones)


 
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