Donald Trump took to X to mock Emmanuel Macron for getting wrong why he left the G7 Summit in Canada | Credits: Shutterstock
US President Donald Trump wasted no time shooting down French President Emmanuel Macron’s claim that his unexpected departure from the G7 summit was motivated by efforts to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.
Trump slammed the assertion as flat-out false, dismissing it as typical Macron overreach. “Publicity‑seeking President Emmanuel Macron of France mistakenly said that I left the G7 Summit… to work on a ‘cease fire’ between Israel and Iran,” he posted on X. “Wrong! He has no idea why I am now on my way to Washington, but it certainly has nothing to do with a Cease Fire. Much bigger than that. Whether purposely or not, Emmanuel always gets it wrong. Stay Tuned!”
Macron, speaking with reporters in Canada, had implied that the US would pressure Israel to engage in negotiations. “Since the US assured they will find a ceasefire and since they can pressure Israel, things may change,” he said, adding that talks must restart and civilians be protected. He warned bluntly: “All who have thought that by bombing from the outside, you can save a country despite itself have always been mistaken.”
‘It’s painful for both parties’
Trump didn’t buy it. He said his early exit was far more consequential and driven by urgent developments. Before boarding Marine One, he cautioned Tehran residents to evacuate, stating, “It’s painful for both parties, but I’d say Iran is not winning this war, and they should talk, and they should talk immediately before it’s too late.”
White House officials later clarified that US forces remained in a defensive posture throughout the operation.
Macron’s comments followed the G7 leaders’ failure to agree on issuing a joint statement regarding the escalating conflict. While Canada and several European nations sought to draft a unified response condemning the violence, Trump refused to commit the US.
The rift spotlights increasing tensions and growing disagreements within the alliance, which usually supports Israel but has recently grown toward being drawn deeper into a Middle East escalation.
The fractious exchange has only underscored deepening divisions between Trump and Macron. The leader’s suggestion that Washington played a peacemaking role, Trump’s quick rebuttal, reflects a widening gulf in their respective narratives—and perhaps in their agendas. Trump’s trip home now carries added weight.
A high-profile misstep
Trump’s trip home now carries added weight. He insists it’s about urgent national security business. But Macron’s assertion hangs over the summit, a high-profile misstep that Trump has seized on to underscore his own “take that, take all” approach on Truth Social: Macron miscalculates, Trump “stays tuned.”
That “message” may resonate with his base, but in diplomatic quarters, it raises uncomfortable questions about trust and cohesion among world leaders.
If the G7 is to be a united front in turbulent times, reminders that not everyone is reading from the same script aren’t ideal.
One thing is clear: the drama over his departure has eclipsed formal summit agenda items. Trump wants the spotlight on Iran and Israel. Macron wants diplomacy first. But as both men dig in, the rest of the G7 is left picking up the pieces of a fractured narrative, just as the Middle East burns ever brighter.


