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Trump revels in French military pomp far from White House turmoil

US President Donald Trump was guest of honour at the traditional Bastille Day military parade in Paris, where French and American military took part in a tribute to the centennial anniversary of the US entry into World War One, appearing happy and relaxed while news at home was increasingly dominated by the controversy over his son's meeting last year with Russian contacts. 

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

For two hours on Friday morning, President Trump looked happy, reports The Washington Post.

He was the honored guest at Paris’s Bastille Day military parade and had a prime seat that gave him a view straight down Avenue des Champs-Elysées and a sneak-peek at the tanks, armored vehicles, gun trucks, carriers and troops in historic uniforms headed his way.

He eagerly leaned forward as he took in the spectacle, frequently jostling his wife or French President Emmanuel Macron when he saw something that particularly delighted him. Whenever troops were before him, Trump jumped to his feet and applauded with an enthusiasm that exceeded the response of those around him. For the first time in months, he looked relaxed and to be thoroughly enjoying himself.

The parade is an annual tradition that dates back to 1880 and this year it included a tribute to the centennial anniversary of the United States entering World War I. The parade featured American and French flags, 200 American troops marching in uniforms from 1917, and eight US Air Force planes.

“Mr. Trump’s presence at my side is a sign of an enduring friendship, and I want to thank him,” Macron said in brief remarks after the parade. “Nothing can ever separate us. . . . I want to thank America for the choice made a hundred years ago.”

Trump has long been delighted by grand displays of military strength, and he has filled his Cabinet with numerous military leaders, although he was disappointed that they couldn’t wear their military uniforms to their new civilian jobs in the administration. Trump wanted to have heavy military equipment and troops at his own inauguration parade in January but that idea was blocked for logistical reasons.

When Macron invited Trump to the parade in a June 27th phone call, the president promised to be there — forcing his staff to quickly scramble to plan a last-minute trip.

The two-hour parade featured one spectacle after another, a demonstration of France’s military history and current capabilities. The parade began with dozens of soldiers on horseback riding along the cobblestone avenue that runs from the Arc de Triomphe to the viewing station where Trump sat. Macron arrived in a military jeep that he rode as if it were a chariot.

At least three military bands took turns playing a parade soundtrack, and massive video screens showed an action-movie-style video that explained the significance of the equipment on display, from vintage tanks that slowly and noisily charged down the avenue to a sleek new armored vehicle from which a handful of troops emerged to act out a mission.

There was then a roar in the sky as nine fighter jets flew overhead, leaving a trail of red, white and blue smoke — representing the French tricolor flag. Dozens of other planes followed. The video screens played footage taken from onboard and wide shots showed the jets flying over iconic Paris sites.

Trump watched the show in awe, as did 8-year-old Wissem Reimann, who wants to be a pilot when he grows up and attended the parade with his mother.

“When the planes flew by, it was magnificent — it touched me deeply,” the boy said, adding that he likes Macron because he’s “happy, young” but that Trump is just “okay.”

Most of those at the parade were there to celebrate the national holiday and take in the spectacle — not to see Trump, who is deeply unpopular here in France.

“It doesn’t please me at all,” said Lola Chauvel, 30, who stood on the banks of the Seine to watch the planes with her 4-year-old son, Mateo. “I’m really not for Donald Trump. He doesn’t at all have the same values as we do.”

“Donald Trump? I don’t like it. I don’t understand why he’s here,” said one of the spectators at the military march, Riad Jhops, 33, an Algerian living in Drancy, a Paris suburb, and who works for an Algerian aluminum company. “He says he has a problem with our climate treaty, and then he comes for the 14th of July.”

The president was largely shielded from any sign of dissent, and scattered protests were small, peaceful and far from the parade route — nothing like the violent demonstrations in Hamburg last weekend where anti-capitalist protesters attempted to make a grand statement at the meeting of the world’s 20 largest economies. There were small protests Thursday night in the symbolic Place de la République, where piñatas of the American president were on full display, and in the Place des États-Unis, where Democrats Abroad staged a protest.

After Trump departed, there was another in the Place de Clichy on Friday afternoon.

“We’re protesting Trump coming to Paris — his racism, his sexism, his actions against the environment, and against migrants and Muslim communities. And the fact that he’s been given legitimacy by this invitation,” said Sylvestre Jaffard, 46, who teaches IT skills in Paris and who on Friday was holding one end of a large sign that read: “Paris against Trump.”

But their anger was not just directed at Trump. Workers collectives picketed Macron, who plans a drastic overhaul of France’s labor market later this fall.

Read more of this report from The Washington Post.