

























Published: | Updated:
Striding into the room nearly an hour late, an ultra–confident President Trump, fresh off the diplomatic high of his early stage Iran deal, bluntly announced to the room of gathered G7 summit leaders, 'I'm the boss.'
The bold, characteristically brash declaration on Wednesday morning in Evian–les–Bains, France, was met with a chorus of laughter from the other heads of state.
The President's swaggering entrance kicked off the third and final day of the high–stakes summit, turning his tardiness into a deliberate display of political leverage.
Trump did not explain the reason he was late.
There was notably a seat–warming that preceded the entrance.
Before Trump's delayed arrival, French President Emmanuel Macron had already called the meeting to order, forcing US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to fill in and sit behind a name card reading 'Trump' until the President finally took over.
Trump arrived following his punchline as he strolled over to his seat beside Emmanuel Macron.
The French President offered his signature firm handshake, greeting the late arrival with a polite, 'Hello! How are you?'
Even though President Trump had praised foreign reporters at several bilateral meetings to their countries leaders, calling his own American media 'mean,' he asked them if they would like to stay for the meeting.
The French President offered his signature firm handshake, greeting the late arrival with a polite, 'Hello! How are you?'
President Trump's proposed Iran framework is drawing scrutiny from conservatives who argue the deal offers Tehran significant economic incentives, including a pathway to a reported $300 billion reconstruction fund, in exchange for future nuclear concessions
Striding into the room nearly an hour late, an ultra–confident President Trump, fresh off the diplomatic high of his early stage Iran deal, bluntly announced to the room of gathered G7 summit leaders, 'I'm the boss'
'It's okay with me,' Trump remarked, before the French media staff ushered them out of the room.
The White House Rapid Response team leaned directly into the moment Trump arrived, creating a viral clip on X with the caption: 'I'm the boss' – @POTUS arrives for a working session at the G7 summit in France.'
Trump came into the G7 with more bravado than ever, ready to tout the new deal he says he has made with Iran – and telling reporters he hopes the two countries have a 'good relationship.'
An ambitious new roadmap aimed at freezing Middle East hostilities, providing economic relief to Iran and initiating a '60–day negotiating process' has triggered intense debate on both sides.
The primary flashpoint is a provision that could potentially create a staggering '$300 billion reconstruction and development fund for Iran,' raising sharp questions about whether the proposed incentives concede too much.
The debate centers on a still officially unreleased memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran. According to reports detailing the document, the temporary framework is designed to halt further escalation after months of intense conflict that recently peaked with American strikes on Iranian nuclear installations and left the region on the brink of an all–out war.
Rather than focusing strictly on Iran's nuclear infrastructure, the sweeping agreement reportedly encompasses almost every critical geopolitical pressure point in the area, including Lebanon, the Strait of Hormuz, sanctions policy, maritime security and the future presence of American forces in the Middle East.
Advocates frame the proposal as a strategic trial run to gauge Tehran's genuine commitment to a broader diplomatic solution. But opponents contend that the plan hands major financial lifelines to Iran without demanding permanent, verifiable rollbacks of its nuclear program upfront.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。