High tension G20 opens

High tension G20 opens
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Highlights

G20 powers open two days of summit talks on Friday after a stormy buildup dominated by tensions with Russia and US President Donald Trumps combative stance on trade and climate fears Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will be among the world leaders gathering amid high tension over an array of world issues including the Ukraine conflict, trade with China and relations with Saudi Ar

Buenos Aires: G20 powers open two days of summit talks on Friday after a stormy buildup dominated by tensions with Russia and US President Donald Trump’s combative stance on trade and climate fears. Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will be among the world leaders gathering amid high tension over an array of world issues including the Ukraine conflict, trade with China and relations with Saudi Arabia. But the two will not sit down together after Trump abruptly cancelled a planned meeting, citing Russia’s recent seizure of Ukrainian ships and sailors.

Protesters have vowed mass rallies to harangue the world leaders gathering in crisis-hit Argentina, where recent violence between rival football fans raised questions about the police’s ability to control unrest. Trump landed in Buenos Aires on Thursday after stoking tensions by calling off the Putin meeting over the Ukrainian ships. “I look forward to a meaningful Summit again as soon as this situation is resolved!” Trump wrote on Twitter.

His decision came as a US probe into Russia’s role in Trump’s election campaign intensified. Investigator Ro­b­ert Mueller revealed former top Trump aide Michael Cohen had admitted direct communications with Putin’s office. Trump aimed to start the summit with a victory for his “America First” trade agenda, by having trade negotiators sign a successor to the North Ame­rican free trade pact NAFTA, the US-Mexico-Can­a­da Agre­e­ment (USMCA). He declares it a victory on behalf of the US workers he claims were cheated by NAFTA.

Trump also has China in his sights as he prepares to meet President Xi Jinping on the G20 margins. The US has cast talks on Saturday with Xi as a deadline for China to cave on key trade concerns of Trump. The US leader has slapped $250 billion in tariffs on the Asian power and threatened more to come in January.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel missed the summit’s opening after her plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Cologne due to what she called a “serious” a technical problem. She eventually took off on a flight from Madrid bound for Buenos Aires on Friday.

Her temporary absence complicated French Pre­si­dent Emmanuel Mac­ron’s attempts to build a European front against Trump at a meeting of EU leaders attending the G20 on Friday. Among the other leaders at the summit will be Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the focus of tensions over the murder of one of his prominent critics in October. Macron said he would raise the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi with the crown prince.

G20 sources said climate change was emerging as the biggest stumbling block to agreement on a joint communique when the summit concludes on Saturday. Trump has yanked the US out of the landmark Paris climate pact. His opposition to collective action stands in defiance of scientists’ increasingly urgent warnings that policy action is desperately needed to counter the climate threat. Macron meanwhile warn­ed France would refuse to move forward on a trade accord with South America’s Mercosur bloc if Brazil’s inc­oming far-right President, Ja­ir Bolsonaro, pulls out of the Paris climate accord.

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