
A major diplomatic rift has erupted between Rome and Washington after Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani abruptly canceled a high-profile trip to the United States. The sudden cancellation follows comments from US President Donald Trump, who claimed Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni “begged” him for a photograph at this week’s G7 summit in France.
Tajani was scheduled to arrive in the US on Sunday, June 21, for a critical two-day diplomatic visit. However, following the broadcast of Trump’s remarks, Tajani announced on Friday afternoon that the trip was off.
”The serious and offensive words of President Trump towards Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni offend all of Italy,” Tajani wrote in a statement on X. “For this reason, I have decided to cancel my visit to the United States.”
The Spark: A G7 Dispute
The controversy stems from an interview Trump gave to the Italian television network La7 during the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France. While world leaders initially appeared cordial—with footage capturing Trump and Meloni deep in conversation on a sofa—Trump painted a radically different picture to journalists.
According to the broadcast transcript, Trump claimed that Meloni “wanted a picture with me so badly” and that he only agreed because he “felt sorry for her.” He further suggested the Italian leader should be “happy that I talked to her, I didn’t have to talk to her.”
Meloni Fires Back: ‘Italy Never Begs’
The response from Rome was swift and unusually fierce for a European ally. Meloni released a sharply worded video on social media, visibly stunned, flatly accusing the US president of fabricating the entire interaction.
”Donald Trump’s statements are completely made up,” Meloni said. “I don’t know why the president of the United States behaves this way with his own allies. I can only say that it’s a pity he doesn’t show the same determination with enemies of the West… with leaders with whom, instead, he is far more accommodating.”
She concluded her address with a firm defense of national sovereignty: “Neither I nor Italy ever beg.”
Fraying Alliances
The public fallout marks a sharp deterioration in a relationship that has grown increasingly fragile over the last several months. While Meloni initially positioned herself as a vital geopolitical bridge between the European Union and the Trump administration—even being the only EU head of state to attend Trump’s second inauguration—cracks have widened over major foreign policy disputes.
The relationship notably soured in April when Trump publicly rebuked Meloni for defending Pope Leo XIV’s anti-war stance regarding the Middle East conflict. Rome’s refusal to back US military actions in Iran, alongside long-standing friction over NATO spending and US trade tariffs, has steadily alienated the two right-wing leaders.
The backlash across Rome’s political spectrum has been total. Giovanbattista Fazzolari, undersecretary to the prime minister’s office, warned that Trump’s “inappropriate outbursts” are actively “wrecking the historic relations between the United States and Europe.” Meanwhile, Italian defense minister Guido Crosetto noted that such comments do no favors to the Western alliance, and opposition Senator Matteo Renzi condemned Trump’s remarks as “horrifying, as always.”
With Tajani’s trip officially axed, the diplomatic ball is now firmly in Washington’s court as international observers wait to see if the White House will move to de-escalate the row.
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