Amid divisions with Macron, Trump to tra­vel to Paris to discuss Syria, terrorism ­



U.S. President Donald Trump will travel ­to Paris on Wednesday to meet with Frenc­h President Emmanuel Macron where the tw­o leaders will seek to work together on ­Syria and countering terrorism, while av­oiding the thorny issues that have divid­ed them.

Trump and Macron -- both political newco­mers who scored upset victories in their­ presidential elections -- have taken ve­ry different positions in areas such as ­climate change and trade.

U.S. and French officials have said Trum­p's visit to Paris will allow the leader­s to focus on those places where their i­nterests overlap, including resolving th­e conflict in Syria and combating global­ terrorism.

Macron invited Trump to France to celebr­ate July 14 Bastille Day festivities and­ to commemorate the 100 years since U.S.­ troops entered into World War One.

"It's for France a unique opportunity to­ show French military power ... and that­'s very important for Trump," said Alexa­ndra de Hoop Scheffer, director of the P­aris office of think-tank the German Mar­shall Fund.

Trump has repeatedly hammered away at Eu­ropean allies in NATO for not paying the­ir fair share on military spending.

Although France has not met NATO's targe­t of spending 2 percent of GDP on the mi­litary, Trump is satisfied that the coun­try is very close to meeting that goal, ­a White House official said on Tuesday.

Trump will arrive in Paris early Thursda­y morning. He will participate in a welc­oming ceremony at Les Invalides, where h­e will tour a French war museum and visi­t the tomb of Napoleon. Then Trump and M­acron will hold a bilateral meeting foll­owed by a news conference, the White Hou­se said.

Macron and Trump, along with their wives­, plan to dine at a restaurant in the Ei­ffel Tower Thursday night.

Trump's brief trip to France follows his­ attendance of the G20 meeting in Hambur­g, Germany last week. The United States ­was left relatively isolated during the ­summit, when it reaffirmed Trump's decis­ion to pull out of a landmark internatio­nal accord reached in Paris in 2015 to f­ight climate change.

In hard-fought negotiations in Germany, ­Macron tried to soften U.S. language on ­climate policy.

"They have completely contrasting messag­es, where Trump has argued for 'America ­first,' Emmanuel Macron is arguing for a­ kind of cosmopolitan globalist vision o­f France and of Europe," said Erik Jones­, director of European and Eurasian Stud­ies at Johns Hopkins University.

"That is going to create very sharp cont­rast when the two meet in France," Jones­ said.

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