Trump cuts G7’s trip due to “what
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Conflict from Israel-Iran that is coming about G7 Summit
President Trump will shorten his trip to Canada for a meeting with world leaders and will fly back to Washington on Monday night, said press secretary Karoline Leavitt, citing “what is happening in the Middle East.”
Trump arrived in Canada on Sunday for the annual G7 Summitand met with the leaders of Canada and the United Kingdom on early Monday. But Leavitt said in X on Monday night that the president would leave early, seeming to refer to Israel-Iran’s conflict.
“A lot was achieved, but due to what is happening in the Middle East, President Trump will leave tonight after dinner with heads of state,” Leavitt wrote.
When asked on Monday why the summit will leave, Trump said: “I have to return early for obvious reasons.”
While Air Force 1 was given before leaving Canada, Trump published on his social platform of truth that his early return to the capital was not related to any high conversation of Israel-Iran’s fire. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, had raised the possibility of a high fire before, causing criticism of Mr. Trump.
“He has no idea why I am now on the way to Washington, but it certainly has nothing to do with a high fire. Much larger than that,” Trump wrote.
The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, also returns to Washington, said a state department spokesman for News themezone.
The United States does not join Israel’s military offensive, US officials said to News themezone on Monday night. Despite the reports that Trump asked the National Security Council and the Situation Chamber to prepare on his return to the White House, the members of the Cabinet in the National Security Council are already waiting 24 hours a day, even since Israel’s strikes in Iran began last week.
A spokesman for the office of the Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told News themezone that the country “was informed of President Trump’s departure through official channels before the Public Announcement of the White House.”
The situation in the Middle East has already been the focus of much of the summit. During Mr. Trump’s meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the president said he had “talked to everyone” regarding Israel and Iran.
“I have talked to everyone. Israel is going very well, as you probably note,” said the president, added: “I think an agreement will be signed or something will happen, but I think an agreement will be signed. I think Iran is a nonsense of not signing one.”
After the Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Iran had sent messages to intermediaries that indicate that they want to discourage the conflict, Trump told journalists during his meeting with the Canadian Prime Minister that he was aware of the messages.
When journalists asked him what he had heard about Iran, he replied: “They would like to speak. But they should have done that before. They had 60 days and had 60 days. And on day 61, I said, we don’t have an agreement. They have to make a deal.” He continued to say: “It is painful for both parties, but I would say that Iran is not winning this war. And they should speak, and they should speak immediately before it is too late.”
The president’s sudden return to Washington arrives as Israel and Iran exchange air attacks and missile attacks in the most intense struggle of the two enemies in decades.
Israel has carried out multiple rounds of air attacks since the end of last week, saying that it has been aimed at Iran’s nuclear program, scientific researchers and senior military officials. Iran has retaliates with missile attacks and drones in Israel.
Monday, Israel struck Iranian state television in the capital of Tehran, and urged hundreds of thousands of residents of the center of Tehran to evacuate. Mr. Trump wrote in Truth Social: “Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!”
The president and other US officials have said publicly and in private The fact that the United States is not involved in Israel’s strikes about Iran, although Israel told the United States about the operation in advance, and the United States has helped Israel intercept Iranian missiles. News themezone has previously reported that Mr. Trump He rejected a plan Raised by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to kill the Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The Israeli leader was asked Monday in an interview with ABC News if he planned to attack Khamenei.
“Look, we are doing what we have to do,” he told Jonathan Karl of ABC News. Karl, noting that Trump had rejected the idea, told Netanyahu that the president feared that Iran’s supreme leader would increase the conflict.
“It will not increase the conflict,” Netanyahu said. “The conflict will end.” He blamed Iran for “taking us to the edge of nuclear war” and said that “in fact, what Israel is doing is avoiding this, ending this, this aggression, and we can only do it by dealing with the forces of evil.”
The Trump administration also warned Iran against US military bases in the region.
Meanwhile, Trump has urged Iran to sign an agreement to limit the scope of its nuclear program, calling multiple rounds of conversations that are now waiting. Iran has long denied any plan to build a nuclear weapon, although international guards say that their highly enriched uranium reserve has increased in recent years. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been skeptical to reach an agreement with Iran.
Olivia Victoria GazisEd o’keefe, Paulina Smolinski, Sara Cook and Kristin Brown contributed to this report.
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- Israel
- Donald Trump
Joe Walsh
Joe Walsh is a senior digital policy editor in News themezone. Joe previously covered the last minute news for Forbes and local news in Boston.


