US President Donald Trump on the second day of the G20 Summit in Hamburg.—AFP
White House officials also saw the potential to draw a win from the Hamburg summit, even if their expectations were measured. They hoped to explain Trump’s priorities and find compromises, even small ones.
Their assessment of the outcome was sharply different from Merkel and Macron’s cautious tone.
“It’s been a really great success,” a senior White House official who was not authorised to speak on the record said on Saturday before Trump departed for the United States. “We are going to get some of the priorities of the administration” out of this summit.
White House officials pointed to several minor changes to the G-20’s official statement on trade policy, saying it better reflects the Trump administration’s point of view.
“We recognise that the benefits of international trade and investment have not been shared widely enough,” the G-20 countries said in a joint statement. “We need to better enable our people to seize the opportunities.”
Similar language was not in the G-20 agreement in 2016 before Trump’s election.
The White House also won a bitter battle over its desire to include language that promoted US fossils fuels in the final statement — wording that European leaders sharply opposed.
China and steel
Trump also prodded other countries to intensify a review of the overproduction of steel, something Trump alleges has ravaged the US steel industry because it cannot compete with cheaper prices from countries such as China.
In response to the White House push, the G-20 agreed to share information about steel production by August and to publish a formal report with recommendations by November. There probably will not be consequences if the deadlines are missed, but it creates a formal process for the White House to amplify its complaints.
Global steel manufacturing has soared, with China accounting for half the world’s production, compared with 15 per cent in 2000, although the United States imports relatively little from China. Beijing agreed to the new G-20 steel requirements on Saturday.
Although the shifts may constitute short-term victories for Trump, one former senior official with the International Monetary Fund said Washington may have incurred long-term losses.
“It comes at a cost of eroding US leadership,” said Eswar Prasad, a senior professor at Cornell University. “If even in calm times such rifts are exposed, it could make it more complicated for the group to work together in more complicated circumstances.”
Trump also had the chance to forge one-on-one relationships with leaders as the summit unfolded around him. It included his first face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which stretched more than two hours, and also his first post-election meeting with Mexican President Enrique Pe?a Nieto.
Relations between the United States and Mexico have been strained since Trump took office, in part because of the US leader’s insistence that Mexico would pay for the creation of a new wall along the US border. When reporters were briefly allowed in the room for their meeting on Friday and he was asked whether he still wanted Mexico to pay for the wall, Trump responded “absolutely”.
Pe?a Nieto did not agree to pay for the construction of the wall during the meeting, and a person briefed on the discussions said Trump did not press the issue during their talks.
‘Wonderful success’?
There were other signs that Trump enjoyed the visit. At a dinner and reception for world leaders and their spouses on Friday night, Trump was among the last to leave. At an event on Saturday morning to announce an initiative to fund female entrepreneurship, Trump called Merkel “incredible”. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “spectacular” and declared that World Bank President Jim Yong Kim “would be a great appointment”.
On Twitter, Trump called the summit a “wonderful success” that was “carried out beautifully” by Merkel. He also said he had “an excellent meeting on trade & North Korea” with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Still, Trump did little to celebrate the G-20’s outcome. President Barack Obama typically marked the end of global summits with a news conference, weighing in on issues he and other leaders discussed.
And on Saturday, many other world leaders, including Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, held lengthy briefings with reporters in Hamburg.
Trump had a different plan. When the summit ended, the president and his aides got in their motorcade, went right to the airport and flew back to the United States.
—By arrangement with The Washington Post
Published in Dawn, July 10th, 2017