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Macron says was ready to out-Trump Trump in handshake

PARIS — France’s new President Emmanuel Macron says he was ready for his “moment of truth” with US counterpart Donald Trump — when they shook hands for the first time.

A combination photo shows US President Donald Trump (L) trying twice to let go of a handshake with France's President Emmanuel Macron (R) as Macron holds tight, before a working lunch ahead of a NATO Summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Reuters

A combination photo shows US President Donald Trump (L) trying twice to let go of a handshake with France's President Emmanuel Macron (R) as Macron holds tight, before a working lunch ahead of a NATO Summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Reuters

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PARIS — France’s new President Emmanuel Macron says he was ready for his “moment of truth” with US counterpart Donald Trump — when they shook hands for the first time.

“You have to show you won’t make little concessions, even symbolic ones,” Mr Macron, 39, told the French weekly Journal du Dimanche on Sunday (May 28).

Footage of the handshake as the pair met for lunch at the US embassy in Brussels ahead of a NATO summit on Thursday has gone viral.

As cameras rolled, Mr Macron held on tight to Mr Trump’s notorious power grip as the two men sat next to each other, the Frenchman’s mouth clenched and eyes firmly fixed at the 70-year-old tycoon’s squinty stare.

After some five seconds, Mr Trump was the first to open his hand but Mr Macron insisted on being the last to let go.

“It’s not the be-all-and-end-all... but a moment of truth,” Mr Macron said.

“I don’t miss a thing, that’s how you get respect.”

The French leader had another chance later in the day to be his own man, making a beeline for German Chancellor Angela Merkel to embrace her before turning to greet Mr Trump — who smilingly pumped and wrenched Mr Macron’s arm as other leaders laughed.

Mr Macron said Mr Trump and the Turkish and Russian presidents Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Vladimir Putin “think in terms of power ratios, which doesn’t bother me”.

But Mr Macron, who became France’s youngest president just three weeks ago, said he does not believe in “the diplomacy of public invective but in bilateral dialogue”.

He faces his next diplomatic test on Monday, when he will host Mr Putin at the palace of Versailles outside Paris. AFP

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