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President Donald Trump, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron meet at the Elysee Palace during first world war commemoration ceremonies in Paris on Saturday. Photo: Bloomberg photo by Marlene Awaad

Trump cancels US cemetery visit because of the rain as diplomatic embarrassments mount

  • French newspaper reports that the American president caused embarrassment by mixing up the Baltic states and the Balkans
  • Planned presidential visit to the American cemetery at Belleau called off due to ‘due to scheduling and logistical difficulties caused by the weather’
Donald Trump

As Donald Trump met Emmanuel Macron in Paris on Saturday, he was beset by potential diplomatic embarrassment.

First, the French newspaper Le Monde reported that on a previous diplomatic occasion in Washington, the American president caused embarrassment by mixing up the Baltic states and the Balkans.

Then, amid ceremonies in the French capital to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of the first world war, a planned presidential visit to the American cemetery at Belleau, a site of immense importance to the US military, was cancelled because it was raining.

Emmanuel Macron, France's president, centre right, waits to greet US President Donald Trump, not pictured, at the Elysee Palace during first world war commemoration ceremonies in Paris. Photo: Bloomberg

The Le Monde report concerned events in Washington in early April this year, when the leaders of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia visited the White House for a meeting and a joint press conference. At the press conference, Trump praised his visitors and their countries for being good members of Nato and for not producing “fake news”.

Trump touches down in France, instantly slams Macron’s ‘insulting’ EU army proposal

But Le Monde perhaps risked provoking a presidential tweet on the latter subject when it reported that at the private meeting, “Trump opened by attributing to [the Baltic leaders] the responsibility for the war in Yugoslavia”.

Dalia Grybauskaite of Lithuania, Kersti Kaljulaid of Estonia and Raimonds Vejonis of Latvia, the paper said, took “a moment to realise that ‘Baltics’ and ‘Balkan’ were getting mixed up in the mind of the American president”.

Trump, Le Monde said, remained “apparently uneducated in the matter by his wife, Melania, originally from the former Yugoslavia”.

US President Donald Trump gestures as he leaves after a meeting at the Elysee Palace. Photo: Reuters

Melania Trump is from Slovenia, which gained its independence in 1991, at the start of the bloody Balkan conflicts which only ended with the Kosovo war of 1998-99.

The White House did not immediately comment on the Le Monde report.

At the Elysée Palace on Saturday, Trump and Macron made nice for the cameras, despite a Trump tweet on Friday in which he said his opposite number’s remarks about Europe’s need for military security against the US, China and Russia were “very insulting”.

Trump told reporters: “We’re getting along from the standpoint of fairness.”

Despite the cancellation of the visit to Belleau, where nearly 2,000 US Marines died in a ferocious battle in June 1918, Trump was scheduled to visit a different cemetery on Sunday, exactly 100 years since the end of the first world war.

A White House statement said the Belleau visit was “cancelled due to scheduling and logistical difficulties caused by the weather”, and said a delegation “led by Chief of Staff General John Kelly and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Joe Dunford” would attend on the Trumps’ behalf.

Like the Baltic leaders, Macron visited Washington in April this year. As a gift, he brought Trump a tree from Belleau Wood.

The sapling was briefly the subject of intrigue when it disappeared from the spot on the White House lawn where Trump and Macron planted it. It was revealed to have been taken away temporarily, to be quarantined.

In one tweet on Saturday, Trump celebrated the 243rd birthday of the US Marine Corps. In another, the president asked of his French visit: “Is there anything better to celebrate than the end of a war, in particular that one, which was one of the bloodiest and worst of all time?”



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