
Meloni seeks to reset US ties after public clash with Trump over G7 photo and Iran bases
Italy’s prime minister says bilateral cooperation must return to normal, while her foreign minister insists the transatlantic alliance remains indispensable despite weeks of personal recriminations.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has publicly called for a return to “normal” relations with Washington, days after an escalating exchange of personal accusations with President Donald Trump that saw Italy’s foreign minister cancel a trip to the United States. Speaking at a conference in Rome, Meloni said she had “no intention of continuing to fuel this conflict” and told her cabinet that bilateral work with the US must get back on track. The statement marks a deliberate de-escalation from the Italian side following a dispute that began with Trump’s claim that Meloni “begged” him for a photograph at the G7 summit in France — an assertion she called entirely false.
Viewed from Rome, the row is rooted in deeper policy friction. Italian officials point to Trump’s spring 2026 criticism of Pope Leo XIV over the pontiff’s condemnation of US military action against Iran, which prompted Meloni to label the president’s remarks unacceptable. The rift widened when Italy refused to allow the use of its military bases for American operations against Iran, a decision Meloni has framed as a matter of national sovereignty. Trump responded by threatening to withdraw US forces from Italian territory and later, during the G7, revived the dispute by alleging the photo request was a ploy to boost Meloni’s flagging popularity. Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani subsequently cancelled a scheduled visit to Miami, calling the president’s attacks unjustified, though he stressed this week that diplomatic channels never closed and that Secretary of State Marco Rubio is aware of Italy’s position.
In European capitals, the public breakdown is being read as a stress test for the transatlantic alliance at a moment when Washington’s Iran policy is dividing NATO members. Tajani has sought to contain the damage by describing the alliance as “not only sustainable, but indispensable” and by noting that he currently sees no sign of new tariffs or a troop withdrawal. He pointed to the NATO summit scheduled for next month in Ankara as a forum where dialogue can resume. Analysts in London note that the episode has, paradoxically, reinforced Meloni’s domestic standing: her willingness to confront Trump has been interpreted by Italian commentators as a demonstration that conservative governments in Europe can dissent from Washington without abandoning the alliance.
From Washington, there has been no formal response to Meloni’s latest overture. Trump has not retracted his account of the G7 encounter and has previously insisted that Italy’s base refusal created “a great logistical inconvenience.” Recent polling by the American Research Group puts the president’s approval rating at 30 percent, with 66 percent disapproving — a backdrop that lends weight to Meloni’s retort that he should focus on his own popularity. The dossier now rests on whether the Ankara summit can translate the Italian call for normality into a concrete diplomatic reset, or whether the underlying disagreements over Iran and burden-sharing will continue to generate friction between the two allied governments.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The Italian prime minister said she does not intend to keep fueling the conflict with Trump and hopes for a return to normal bilateral relations with the United States. Speaking at a forum in Rome, she reiterated the need for constructive cooperation.
The Italian prime minister hit back at Trump, telling him to focus on his own popularity after he questioned hers. The row escalated with mutual accusations, and Meloni called Trump's attacks senseless and unprovoked.
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