As Trump departed the G7 summit early, French President Emmanuel Macron tried to reframe the exit as strategic.
"There is indeed an offer to meet and exchange," Macron told reporters, suggesting the U.S. might help broker a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
But aboard Air Force One, Trump responded with a swipe that accused Macron of showboating.
“Wrong! He is ‘publicity seeking’ and always gets it wrong," Trump said in a post on his Truth Social site. "He has no idea why I am now on my way to Washington… Much bigger than that. Stay tuned!”
The takedown punctured Macron’s narrative and revealed a rupture in a relationship that has featured theater, flattery and touch.
Macron, who once styled himself as a “Trump whisperer,” has long used charm and proximity to try to manage the unpredictable U.S. leader, often contrasting himself with more openly critical peers like Germany’s Angela Merkel. But those efforts are far from foolproof.
Questioning a push for regime change
But as Trump became increasingly aggressive in his comments about Iran, urging Tehran's " UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER," Macron eventually offered a blunt counter assessment, saying a push for regime change in Iran would spark "chaos" and further destabilize the Middle East.
“We do not want to see Iran acquire nuclear weapons or ballistic capabilities,” Macron told reporters at the G7. “But I believe the greatest mistake today would be to pursue regime change in Iran through military means, as that would lead to chaos."
Recalling the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, he continued: “Does anyone think what was done in Iraq in 2003 was a good idea? Does anyone think what was done in Libya last decade was a good idea? No.”
Macron also noted that he'd had ″the best relations in the world″ with Trump during the U.S. president's first term.
Their diplomatic style has never been purely transactional — and has often been tactile. From their earliest encounters, physical gestures have been part of the pageantry: Trump's firm pats and arm-yanks, Macron's theatrical poise and instinctive touches.
The roots of their rapport run deep. In 2017, Macron dazzled Trump with a Bastille Day parade, formal dinners and white-knuckle handshakes. A viral 29-second grip — knuckles white, jaws clenched — set the tone for a relationship of theatrical dominance.
The physical choreography evolved over the years: Trump yanking Macron’s arm at the Élysée, Macron placing a steadying hand on Trump’s thigh in Washington. Their February 2025 White House meeting brought a refined version of the dance as Macron delivered corrections with charm, countering Trump’s Ukraine comments while laughing at Fort Knox jokes.
Signals of strain before the summit
Trump joked about Macron’s marriage last month after a video of Brigitte Macron playfully pushing her husband surfaced. “Make sure the door remains closed,” he quipped, before adding: “They’re fine.”
But the chill had already begun to set in.
This month, Macron traveled to Greenland — a territory Trump has floated buying — to express solidarity with Danish sovereignty.
“This is not what is done between allies,” Macron said, in a message to Trump.
The G7 summit, intended to project Western unity on Russia and Iran, instead showcased fracture. Trump skipped the final sessions, refused to back new Russia sanctions, and warned Tehran to “immediately evacuate.”
Macron — who announced Tuesday that France will host the next G7 summit in 2026 at the lakeside Alpine resort of Evian-les-Bains — tried to frame the early exit as useful. Trump’s one-line rebuttal shut that down.
Trump’s clash with Macron wasn’t the only unscripted moment to puncture the summit’s polished exterior. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni was filmed rolling her eyes as Macron whispered in her ear during a roundtable — a clip that quickly lit up social media. It was a flash of visible tension at a gathering meant to project unity amid war, economic uncertainty and global unrest.
A turnabout
Later aboard Air Force One, Trump softened his tone. When reporters asked about the outburst, he replied: “That was Emmanuel — nice guy but he doesn’t get it right too often.”
The pivot was familiar.
“It’s difficult to be confident about any clear arc in President Trump’s reactions to people or events,” said Dana Allin, U.S. policy expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “He tends to be disinhibited — he says what’s on his mind, and that can change quickly.”
There was no handshake this time. No shoulder clap. Just a flick of the thumb — and a public slap across the alliance.
The dynamic, Allin suggests, reflects a shift in how Europe engages with Washington. In Trump’s first term, many European leaders treated his behavior as a storm they could wait out.
“Now it seems like a more permanent thing,” Allin said.
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Associated Press writer Martin Silva contributed to this report.
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