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BBC News, Banff, Alberta
The G7 Canadian Summit, which was the first time, was carefully scheduled for the agenda.
This program was transferred to the open war between Israel and Iran and the early departure of US President Donald Trump.
However, Karni said the summit “could start a new era of cooperation on Tuesday, which promotes long -term short -term resistance.”
Here are five departures from the Drama G7 to the Cananan, Albert.
Nations G7 – Italy, USA, France, Germany, UK, Canada and Japan – were one leader on Tuesday after the US president’s decision to abandon the Washington summit.
Participants put a positive rotation for cutting departure.
Carney Prime Minister said he fully understood the President’s decision, while French President Emmanuel Macron called the question of one reporter whether the group was actually “disrespectful”.
Trump said he left the rapidly unfolding events between Israel and Iran.
The White House insisted that the president spent a “wonderful day” in Albert and reached a lot during the trip. The secretary of the Treasury Scott of Import remained behind to present the US.
Trump’s departure was not necessarily bad, said Dennis Rudic, director of the G7 London Research Group.
While he was there, it turned out that everyone was “on eggshells” with leaders who smiled, but wary that “you do not know what would change.”
The next day they were more calm, she said. “It didn’t look forcibly. It looked much more natural.”
However, this meant that Trump missed the planned bilateral meetings with the President of Ukraine Volodomir Zelensky, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albonez and Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum (although he talked to her later on the phone, the White House said).
By Tuesday, most of the world’s attention moved from the Mountain Resort in the Rocky Mountains of Canada to deploy the conflict in the Middle East and uncertainty about the potential course of the United States.
The conflict also obscured most of the first day of the summit when the G7 leaders searched for consensus in response to tension in the region.
In the end, all seven, the US, also released a communique, calling for “de -escalation of hostilities in the Middle East, including the ceasefire in the newspaper” – although it stopped to call for ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
Later, Trump accused the French president of “publicity” to his opinion that the United States was working on ceasefire.
On Tuesday, Macron said it was Trump who discussed this option.
“I am not responsible for changing the US administration,” he said.
Despite this back and forth, the statement was a demonstration of unity.
In Ukraine, Zelensky will leave this summit new help from Canada, but, in particular, without a joint support statement.
There were reports that Canada had abandoned plans for a strong statement in the war on the US resistance.
By pressing this, Carney denied the lack of consensus and pointed to the comments to Ukraine in the summit of the summit.
In this statement, the G7 “expressed support for the efforts of President Trump to achieve a fair and lasting peace in Ukraine” and pressed Russia to agree with the ceasefire.
It also said that they “strongly study all the possibilities for maximum pressure on Russia, including financial sanctions” – what Trump resisted.
Another result may cause friction for Karni at home. Visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the summit became tension among the Sikh Canadians.
Carney’s office stated that India and Canada agreed to restore diplomatic services after both countries expelled the best messengers.
Subsequently, the accusation was charged with the New Deli government agents involved in the murder of the separatist Sikh leader on Canadian land.
According to the meeting between Carney and Modi, he raised a “transnational crime and repression, security and order based on the rules” in the conversation.
However, Karni, a former Governor of the Central Bank of Canada and the UK, entered his first G7 Summit as Prime Minister and held a purposeful agenda and left joint statements on artificial intelligence and quantum calculations, migrant smuggling, critical minerals and other issues.
The approach was “tight, detailed, oriented – you can see a banker,” said Ms. Rudic.
She made a compliment of approach to diplomacy aimed at the results, pointing to the example of an agreement on raising global fire cooperation, “not referring to climate change.”
One of the most observed moments of the summit was the seat between Trump and Karni.
Both countries were reportedly close to the trade and security transaction after the conversations were launched last month to decide the war on Tat-TAT.
Trump said the obstacles remained – he is a “tariff man”, Karni “has a more difficult idea.”
But these differences are insurmountable, the statement of the Carney’s office said, which states that “the leaders agreed to negotiate transactions within 30 days.”
During this term, the Prime Minister said he would continue the agreement “in the interests, of course, Canada and is in line with the US interests.”
The G7 also gave Carney the opportunity to expose several world leaders in trading with Canada.
The Prime Minister has a high goal of making the Canadian economy the strongest in G7, trying to reduce deep economic dependence on the United States.
On Tuesday, European officials said they were close to signing the procurement agreement with Canada, which also wants to reduce dependence on American equipment.
Trump was open about one thing he wanted from the summit: trade deals.
While Carney did not leave one, British Prime Minister Sir Kire Starmer and US leader smiled after the part of the tariff agreement they sealed last month.
Many other visitors who visit sought to secure the president at their tariffs and trade.
Like Canada, Japanese Prime Minister Shiger Isa and Trump could not reach a breakthrough, but agreed to move forward with trade negotiations.
“We have studied the possibility of a transaction to the wire, but there are still points where our views remain divided,” Isaib told reporters.
There is a certain pressure on the end of the United States – Trump has promised transactions for his own July 9, which means the end of 90 -day pause at his “release” tariffs.
The President of the European Commission Ursul von der Leyen said that the permanent trade talks between the US and the EU were “complex” but “moving” for the transaction until July.