Trudeau says G20 leaders’ statement on Ukraine is not strong enough

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Published November 19, 2024 at 10:02 am

Trudeau Brazil G20 Ukraine
X / @JustinTrudeau

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the final leaders’ statement from the G20 summit in Brazil is not strong enough on the war in Ukraine.

He is also expressing some concern about the impact U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House will have on global support for Ukraine.

Russia is a member of the G20 but President Vladimir Putin has not attended a leaders’ summit since before Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

That year the G20 leaders’ final statement condemned Russia’s actions and demanded it withdraw from Ukraine.

A year later the leaders’ summit ended with watered-down language about the war, and the final statement from Brazil today was even shorter and did not mention Russia at all.

Trudeau says Canada and other G7 nations and “advanced economies” wanted a much stronger statement against the “illegal invasion of Ukraine” but the G20 has broader perspectives.

“No it’s not strong enough for me,” he said.

Trump and his allies have criticized America’s financial support Ukraine and there are concerns the Republicans, who will soon have full control of the White House and Congress, will drastically scale back American backing for Ukraine.

Some of Trump’s allies heavily criticized outgoing President Joe Biden after he authorized this week Ukraine the use of long-range U.S. missiles to attack inside Russia.

Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. and Utah Sen. Mike Lee were among those who accused Biden of trying to start “world war three.”

Trudeau and Biden discussed Ukraine in a 30-minute bilateral meeting in Brazil on Monday and Trudeau said Tuesday that Canada stands behind Biden’s decision.

“I have for months now talked about how important it is to degrade the capacity of the Russian military to strike into Ukraine with impunity because Ukraine hasn’t been able to strike on factories and military production sites in Russia,” Trudeau said in a press conference from Rio de Janeiro Tuesday.

“We have called for that for a while. So I think it’s a good thing that the United States has done that and other partners are doing that.”

Trudeau said the summit came “at a particularly challenging time in the world, for geopolitics but also for citizens all around the world,” due to inflation, war and climate change.

“The world is not what it was 10 years ago,” he said.

Trudeau acknowledged that Trump’s re-election has raised concerns about a number of issues, including climate change and multilateralism.

For Canada, continental trade is also top of mind as Trump has threatened to introduce new border tariffs and the updated North American trade agreement signed in Trump’s first term comes up for review in 2026.

There have been calls from premiers in Ontario and Alberta for Canada to consider shutting Mexico out of those talks as heavy levels of Chinese investment in Mexico have raised questions that it has become a back door into the North American market for Chinese goods.

Both Canada and the U.S. have imposed high tariffs on a number of Chinese-made goods including electric vehicles, steel and aluminum products. They both accuse China of overproduction and dumping.

While in Brazil Trudeau met with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, having their first in-person discussion since her inauguration in October.

Just before that meeting Trudeau publicly raised concern about the high levels of Chinese investment in Mexico.

Trudeau told reporters Tuesday that he “highlighted directly” that concern with Sheinbaum in their meeting, while adding that Canada wants to have strong trade that benefits all citizens in North America.

“But it’s up to the Mexican government to consider what position they’ll take,” he said in French.

The summit comes ahead of Canada assuming the presidency of the G7, a group of powerful economies with like-minded views on geopolitics. Last time Canada hosted the G7 leaders’ summit in 2018, Trump infamously stormed out after tense exchanges over the steel and aluminum tariffs he imposed on Canada. He called Trudeau “dishonest and weak.”

The prime minister said he is not panicked about next year’s summit in Alberta.

“The challenge of working with an American president that doesn’t always put multilateralism and summitry at a high priority is going to be real, but we navigated it successfully,” he said, noting progress at that summit on artificial intelligence and girls’ education.

“When we stay focused on what matters for Canadians, on the principles and the things that are impacting everyone around the world — including American citizens — there’s always ways of getting through.”

Trudeau added that South Africa is aligned on that approach as it hosts the G20 next year, with a focus on how emerging economies can secure more energy.

Last week in Peru, Trudeau announced Canada would push for more nuclear-power collaboration with Southeast Asian countries, and he said that will be a key way Canada tries to form alliances with countries closer to China and India than with Western powers.

By Dylan Robertson

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