U.S. isolated on climate at summit of
world leaders
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[July 10, 2017]
By Paul Carrel and Noah Barkin
HAMBURG (Reuters) - Leaders from the
world's leading economies broke with U.S. President Donald Trump on
climate policy at a G20 summit on Saturday, in a rare public admission
of disagreement and blow to multilateral cooperation.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, keen to show off her skills as a
mediator two months before a German election, achieved her primary goal
at the meeting in Hamburg, convincing her fellow leaders to support a
single communique with pledges on trade, finance, energy and Africa.
But the divide between Trump, elected on a pledge to put "America
First", and the 19 other members of the club, including countries as
diverse as Japan, Saudi Arabia and Argentina, was stark.
Last month Trump announced he was pulling the United States out of a
landmark international climate accord clinched two years ago in Paris.
"In the end, the negotiations on climate reflect dissent – all against
the United States of America," Merkel told reporters at the end of the
meeting.
"And the fact that negotiations on trade were extraordinarily difficult
is due to specific positions that the United States has taken."
The summit, marred by violent protests that left the streets of Hamburg
littered with burning cars and broken shop windows, brought together a
volatile mix of leaders at a time of major change in the global
geo-political landscape.
Trump's shift to a more unilateral, transactional diplomacy has left a
void in global leadership, unsettling traditional allies in Europe and
opening the door to rising powers like China to assume a bigger role.
Tensions between Washington and Beijing dominated the run-up to the
meeting, with the Trump administration ratcheting up pressure on
President Xi Jinping to rein in North Korea and threatening punitive
trade measures on steel.
TRUMP-PUTIN
Trump met Russian President Vladimir Putin for the first time in
Hamburg, a hotly anticipated encounter after the former real estate
mogul promised a rapprochement with Moscow during his campaign, only to
be thwarted by accusations of Russian meddling in the vote and
investigations into the Russia ties of Trump associates.
Putin said at the conclusion of the summit on Saturday that Trump had
quizzed him on the alleged meddling in a meeting that lasted over two
hours but seemed to have been satisfied with the Kremlin leader's
denials of interference.
Trump had accused Russia of destabilizing behavior in Ukraine and Syria
before the summit. But in Hamburg he struck a conciliatory tone,
describing it as an honor to meet Putin and signaling, through Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson, that he preferred to focus on future ties and
not dwell on the past.
"It was an extraordinarily important meeting," Tillerson said,
describing a "very clear positive chemistry" between Trump and the
former KGB agent.
In the final communique, the 19 other leaders took note of the U.S.
decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord and declared it
"irreversible".
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President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping attend the
bilateral meeting at the G20 leaders summit in Hamburg, Germany July
8, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
For its part, the United States injected a contentious line saying
that it would "endeavor to work closely with other countries to help
them access and use fossil fuels more cleanly and efficiently."
French President Emmanuel Macron led a push to soften the U.S.
language.
"There is a clear consensus absent the United States," said Thomas
Bernes, a distinguished fellow at the Centre for International
Governance Innovation. "But that is a problem. Without the largest
economy in the world how far can you go?"
Jennifer Morgan, executive director at Greenpeace, said the G19 had
"held the line" against Trump's "backward decision" to withdraw from
Paris.
On trade, another sticking point, the leaders agreed they would
"fight protectionism including all unfair trade practices and
recognize the role of legitimate trade defense instruments in this
regard."
The leaders also pledged to work together to foster economic
development in Africa, a priority project for Merkel.
VIOLENT PROTESTS
Merkel chose to host the summit in Hamburg, the port city where she
was born, to send a signal about Germany's openness to the world,
including its tolerance of peaceful protests.
It was held only a few hundred meters from one of Germany's most
potent symbols of left-wing resistance, a former theater called the
"Rote Flora" which was taken over by anti-capitalist squatters
nearly three decades ago.
Over the three days of the summit, radicals looted shops, torched
cars and lorries. More than 200 police were injured and some 143
people have been arrested and 122 taken into custody.
Some of the worst damage was done as Merkel hosted other leaders at
for a concert and lavish dinner at the Elbphilharmonie, a modernist
glass concert hall overlooking the Elbe River.
Merkel met police and security force after the summit to thank them,
and condemned the "unbridled brutality" of some of the protestors,
but she was forced to answer tough questions about hosting the
summit in Hamburg during her closing press conference.
(Additional reporting by Andrea Shalal, Thomas Escritt, Jeff Mason,
Roberta Rampton, Denis Dyomkin, Joseph Nasr, Sabine Siebold, Gernot
Heller; Writing by Noah Barkin and Paul Carrel; Editing by Janet
Lawrence and Jon Boyle)
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