G7 leaders agree Macron should send message to Iran

G7 leaders agreed that President Emmanuel Macron
should hold talks and pass on messages to Iran after they discussed the issue
at a summit in southwestern France on Saturday evening, a French presidential
source said.
The source said the priority remained to prevent
Iran obtaining nuclear weapons and defuse tensions in the Gulf.
“As president of the G7, the president did indeed
get the power to discuss and send a message to Iranian authorities on the basis
of the exchanges we had last night,” the French official said, without
providing any details.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump on Sunday
dismissed media reports of tensions among the leaders of the G7 group of
industrialized nations meeting in Biarritz and said everyone was “getting along
very well.”
“Before I arrived in France, the Fake and Disgusting
News was saying that relations with the 6 others countries in the G-7 are very
tense, and that the two days of meetings will be a disaster,” Trump wrote on
Twitter shortly before meeting UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson for a bilateral
focused on trade.
“Well, we are having very good meetings, the Leaders
are getting along very well, and our Country, economically, is doing great -
the talk of the world!”
G7 leaders back strengthening cooperation with
Russia after its expulsion from the group in 2014 but believe it is too early
to reintegrate Moscow and return to a G8, diplomatic sources said Sunday.
“The leaders of the G7 are in favor of reinforcing
coordination with Russia (but)... it is too early for reintegration,” said a
diplomatic source, who asked not to be named.
G7 leaders had also mandated French President
Emmanuel Macron to send a message to Iran as tensions rise over its nuclear
program, the source said.