G7 discusses Amazon fires, trade wars
   Date :27-Aug-2019
 
BIARRITZ (France) : G7 LEADERS close their summit on Monday with discussion of world problems including the fires ravaging the Amazon rainforest, but overshadowed by President Donald Trump’s trade wars and questions over the group’s unity. In the summit in Biarritz, a high-end surfers’ paradise in south-western France, leaders of the G7 countries -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States -- ended their second day with another sumptuous dinner of the finest French cuisine. They also posed for a group photo with the ocean and Biarritz’s tall lighthouse as a backdrop. Trump proclaimed that the G7 summit was going “beautifully” on Sunday.
 
 
On the final day, the agenda included discussions of the fires destroying chunks of the Amazon, a scenario that European leaders have described as an assault on the so-called green lungs of the world. Trump has been less vocal on the issue. He also stands out from the rest of the G7 in his budding friendship with Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a former Army officer who has given freer rein to industrial farmers and loggers who have made the country an agribusiness power -- at huge cost to the environment. An even bigger issue dividing Trump from the rest of the G7 throughout the summit was trade and the US President’s effort to force even close allies into hard negotiations on market access and tariffs.
 
Trump arrived in Biarritz fresh from having upped the ante with increased tariffs in the escalating trade struggle with China. European leaders lined up to press for caution and on Sunday Trump gave a glimmer of hope that he was reconsidering his all-or-nothing approach to the dispute between the world’s two biggest economies, when he appeared to admit he’d had “second thoughts” about the most recent escalation. But only hours later, Trump’s spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham did a 180 degree turn, saying the President had been misunderstood and that his real regret was not to have raised tariffs on China even more strongly.
 
At a breakfast meeting, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson became the latest of the G7 partners to urge Trump to step back from trade wars that critics fear could tip the world economy into recession. The Summit saw a dramatic shift of focus on Saturday when Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif flew in to discuss the diplomatic deadlock on Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme. Zarif’s presence had not been expected and it represented a gamble by French host Emmanuel Macron who is seeking to soothe spiralling tensions between Iran and the United States. The Iranian top diplomat didn’t meet Trump, French diplomats said, but the presence of the two men in the same place at least sparked hopes of a detente. Just this July, the US Government imposed heavy sanctions seeking to hamper Zarif’s travel, and effectively banning him from the United States.