Donald Trump hints at U-turn on decision to pull US out of Paris accord

French and US presidents look for common ground to reset an awkward relationship

US President Donald Trump has said that 'most people in politics' would have taken the meeting his son, Donald Jnr, took with Russian lawyers during the presidential election campaign. Video: the White House

US president Donald Trump held the door open to a reversal of his decision to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord on Thursday, but did not say what he would need in return to persuade him to do so.

Mr Trump, who has made few friends in Europe with his rejection of the 2015 Paris agreement and his "America First" trade stance, met with French president Emmanuel Macron as both leaders sought common ground to reset an awkward relationship.

“Something could happen with respect to the Paris accords, let’s see what happens,” Mr Trump told a news conference. “If it happens, that will be wonderful, and if it doesn’t, that’ll be okay too.”

Mr Trump has claimed the Paris accord is soft on leading polluters such as China and India, putting US industry at risk.

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“I respect the wish to preserve jobs, I think that’s compatible with the Paris accord,” Mr Macron said at the joint conference. “There is no sudden and unexpected change today, otherwise we would have announced it, but there is the shared intention to continue discussing these issues.”

Mr Trump and Mr Macron’s relationship got off to a bumpy start, but both have an incentive to improve relations – Mr Macron hopes to elevate France’s role in global affairs, and Mr Trump, seemingly isolated among world leaders, needs a friend overseas.

Mr Trump came to France beset by allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US election, with emails released on Tuesday suggesting his eldest son welcomed an offer of Russian help against his father's Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Weeks after Mr Macron hosted Russian president Vladimir Putin at the Palace of Versailles, Mr Trump will bask in the trappings of the Bastille Day military parade on Friday and commemorations of the entry 100 years ago of US troops into the first World War.

Mr Macron welcomed Mr Trump with a warm handshake and smiles, a contrast to the clenched-jaw greeting they shared at their first encounter in May.

“Emmanuel, nice to see you. This is so beautiful,” the US president told Mr Macron as they met at the Hotel des Invalides where Napoleon Bonaparte and other French war heroes are buried.

For the 39-year-old Mr Macron, France’s youngest leader since Napoleon two centuries ago, the visit is a chance to use soft diplomacy to win Mr Trump’s confidence and set about influencing US foreign policy, which European leaders say lacks direction.

Mr Macron views it as counter-productive to isolate the United States on the world stage, and said he and Mr Trump had asked diplomats to draw up in the coming weeks a concrete initiative aimed at preparing the future of Syria.

“On the Iraq-Syria situation, we have agreed to continue working together, in particular on the building of a roadmap for the post-war period,” Mr Macron said.

Mr Trump said work was underway to negotiate a ceasefire in a second region of Syria.

On Friday, Mr Trump will be guest of honour at France’s July 14th celebrations, a year after a Tunisian man loyal to Islamic State ploughed a truck through revellers on a seafront promenade in Nice, killing more than 80.

During the US election campaign, Mr Trump said a wave of militant attacks showed “France is no longer France”, and reprimanded the then-Socialist government for allegedly bowing its head to jihadists.

In bringing Mr Trump to Paris, Mr Macron has stolen a march on Britain’s embattled prime minister Theresa May.

London’s offer of a state visit for Trump met fierce domestic criticism and warnings that he would be greeted by mass protests.

An Elabe poll showed that 59 percent of French people approved of Mr Macron’s decision to invite Mr Trump.

– Reuters