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What to expect on Biden’s first foreign trip as president: G7, Nato, meeting Putin and queen
- Joe Biden to attend G7 summit in England, meet with Nato allies in Brussels
- US president will meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Geneva on June 16
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Joe Biden will fight what he calls a “defining” battle for democracy on his first foreign presidential trip, meeting top US allies in Europe ahead of a tricky summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
The busy agenda – with G7, Nato and European Union summits ahead of the Putin sit-down in Geneva – will see Biden fly the flag for a West he sees at an “inflection point”.
“This is a defining question of our time,” Biden wrote in The Washington Post ahead of his trip.
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“Will the democratic alliances and institutions that shaped so much of the last century prove their capacity against modern-day threats and adversaries? I believe the answer is yes. And this week in Europe, we have the chance to prove it.”
Biden’s pitch marks a return to a traditional US world view after four years during which Donald Trump flirted with autocrats and recast multilateralism as a dirty word.
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Biden meets G7 partners – Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan – from Friday to Sunday at a seaside resort in southwest England, then visits Queen Elizabeth at Windsor Castle.
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